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Posts Tagged ‘Risks’

Study: Malware Risks Are Growing Exponentially

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

A new report from security services provider ScanSafe finds that companies are at increasing risk of having employees inadvertently download backdoors and password stealers onto corporate computers from Web sites that have malicious software hidden on them.

A company in ScanSafe’s focus group faced a nearly 500 percent greater risk of exposure to those threats in September than was faced in January of this year, according to ScanSafe’s Global Threat Report released on Tuesday.

Companies in the energy sector are at greater risk from Web-based malware than other industries, the report concludes. The energy sector, worldwide, faces a 189 percent higher risk of exposure from workers visiting sites with malware on them than other industries, followed by the pharmaceutical and chemicals industry, construction and engineering, and media and publishing.

“On a more positive note, government agencies were at 0 percent, which indicates they were at neither higher nor lower rates of exposure compared to other verticals,” Mary Landesman, senior security researcher at ScanSafe, writes in a blog post.

The industry with the lowest rate of exposure was aviation and automotive. Landesman says she can’t say exactly why one sector is more at risk than another but expects to release more findings soon that could help answer that question.

Overall, there was a flattening in the volume of threats in August and September, although ScanSafe is seeing a spike in October. Landesman says things could get ugly from a malware perspective throughout the rest of this year.

The holidays tend to be busy for socially engineered-types of malware, Landesman said. Plus, “the economy is hurting people’s finances and this could encourage criminals to up their efforts to gain more money through illicit means,” she said.

Also on Tuesday, security firm MessageLabs released statistics on the numbers of phishing attacks related to the banking crisis.

MessageLabs intercepted 7,000 phishing attacks exploiting Bank of America on October 16 and 15,000 on October 17, reaching 125,000 total e-mails over that weekend. American Express was the focus of a phishing attack that started on October 20 and reached 35,000 e-mails for the day.

The Cutwail botnet, which controls more than 1 million active unsuspecting zombie computers on the Internet and is believed to be the largest botnet, is responsible for those phishing attempts, MessageLabs said.

Source — Yahoo!

Evangelicals Start Soul-Searching As Prospect Of Obama Win Risks Christian Gains In Politics

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

As the words to the Christian rock song fade from the giant screens at Mountain Springs church, Pastor Steve Holt steps forward to speak to his congregation. These are perilous times, he says, but he urges them not to despair.

“There are still two weeks before the election,” he says, before announcing a week of fasting and prayer in the run-up to polling day.

For conservative Christians, such as Holt and his congregation, the prospect of a Democratic victory represents sheer calamity. Yet Evangelicals have not been natural supporters of John McCain, doubting the Republican’s commitment to banning abortion and gay marriage.

But conservative Christians believe a Barack Obama presidency would roll back a generation of political gains which culminated with their privileged position in George Bush’s White House.

“I don’t think we are going to have any influence with Barack Obama in the White House,” Holt told the Guardian.

The election represented a paradigm shift for the US as well as for evangelicals. “I think there is a backlash against Bush because of the economy and I think frankly because of a lack of leadership,” Holt said. “There is a sense we are in a position of weakness right now.”

A political forum at the church saw bewilderment and frustration among members of Holt’s flock as they tried to come to terms with Obama’s widening lead over McCain - and the potential loss of their power in Washington.

“Has Obama through mass hypnosis figured out a way to bypass the critical faculties of all Americans?” asked Brian Sherman, a church volunteer.

Mark Andre, a commodities trader, said he had not started out a supporter of McCain - though the senator was well liked by his Democratic friends before the campaign. “It’s almost like Democrats became hateful of McCain. Has it been Sarah Palin and her stance, or is it just Obama and his ideology? What happened to all the Democrats who loved McCain?”

Political soul-searching is under way at conservative churches across the US - but nowhere more so than Colorado Springs, a town known locally as the “evangelical mecca”.

Local government officials lured conservative Christian groups here with tax breaks in the 1980s. Colorado Springs is now headquarters for the most powerful Christian organisations in the US.

The town and surrounding areas remain defiantly conservative in a state that has been leaning Democratic in state elections for the last four years since voting Bush in 2000 and 2004. John Morris, the chairman of the county Democratic party, called the town “a black hole of Republican extremism”.

Colorado is now emerging as a key battleground state, and Republicans are counting on the evangelicals to help McCain hang on. The party has sent emissaries to 400 churches over the past few days to recruit volunteers for “evangelical-to-evangelical” phone banks. It has also used the churches to generate excitement about Palin’s rally schedule yesterday, handing out tickets after morning services on Sunday.

In an ordinary election that grassroots organisation would make a difference. Evangelicals consider it a “Christian duty” to vote. Past elections have seen high turnouts among conservative voters - especially if there were ballots on gay marriage or abortion.

In an attempt to bring out the faithful this year conservatives in Colorado drafted a ballot measure that confers human rights on a fertilised egg from the moment of conception.

Church leaders have also tried to impress on their followers that - even if they are still cool towards McCain - conservatives cannot afford to have Obama in the White House.

But with election officials predicting unprecedented turnout across Colorado - up to 90% in heavily Democratic Denver and Boulder -the tested Republican strategy of winning elections by getting out the evangelical vote is unlikely to work. That vote would be simply swamped by a very high turnout.

There are also signs that evangelical power over the ballot box could be waning - even in Colorado Springs.

Recent years have seen more Democrats in the area. There have also been signs of an internal revolt against local conservative Republican politicians.

Over the years, the influx of evangelicals to Colorado Springs shifted the local party establishment to the right. Party politics increasingly revolved around the emotive issues such as abortion. That alienated more traditional Republicans who wanted their officials to focus on the economy and infrastructure.

Last month, Jan Martin, a lifelong Republican and an elected city council official, announced she was supporting Obama because she believed the party had moved too far to the right.

“I think Bush has been too extreme, and he has catered to this black-and-white extreme view of conservative Christian thinking. The leadership of the local party is still very conservative and still very much us against them.”

A number of evangelical leaders have also begun asking whether their movement has drifted too far to the right. Some church leaders in Colorado Springs have called for the evangelical focus to be broadened beyond abortion and gay marriage and address issues such as climate change and poverty.

Few are willing to publicly write off McCain and the current brand of Republicanism. But in the political forum at Mountain Springs, local Republican elected officials were already discussing how they would operate under an Obama administration.

“God forbid, but if it comes about we are going to have to be speaking out like never before,” said Doug Lamborn, the local Republican member of Congress.

Republicans needed to update their methods of communications by launching more conservative blogs, added Amy Stephens, a local state representative.

Holt was also now moving to reconcile himself to defeat. “This could be the best thing that ever happened to the evangelical cause,” he said. “We’re used to being against the tide.”

Source — Guardian

Defibrillators Are Lifesaver, But Risks Give Pause

Saturday, September 13th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

The implanted defibrillator, a device that can automatically shock an erratically beating heart back to a normal rhythm, has been proved to save lives. Hence its nickname: an emergency room in the chest. Major medical groups have recommended that more patients receive the devices.

But in the last two years the number of patients receiving defibrillators has actually declined, as more doctors and patients decide the risks and uncertainties the devices pose may outweigh their potential benefits.

This trend — the first decline since implanted defibrillators were introduced in 1985 — has spotlighted a shortcoming that health experts have struggled with for years. Simply put, there is no adequate tool or test to predict which of the heart patients who might seem good candidates to get the expensive devices are the ones most likely to ever need their life-saving shock.

Defibrillators have undoubtedly saved the lives of tens of thousands of Americans. That is why insurers still typically pay for the devices and the surgical procedure to implant them, which can top $50,000 for each patient.

What makes many doctors and patients increasingly wary, though, is a string of highly publicized recalls in recent years, along with mounting evidence suggesting that a vast majority of people who get a defibrillator never need it.

Industry estimates and medical studies indicate that defibrillators have saved the lives of 10 percent of the more than 600,000 people in this country who have received them, at most. While survivors would no doubt take those odds, 9 of 10 people who get defibrillators receive no medical benefit. One big long-term medical study indicated the odds of a defibrillator saving a patient’s life might be even slimmer — about 1 in 14, over the five-year period studied.

The problem that defibrillators pose is in some ways singular among medical technologies. For devices like artificial knees, which improve lives but do not save them, few people would settle for only a 1 in 10 chance of success. For a potentially life-saving cancer drug, a patient might grasp at even much slimmer odds. Where defibrillators differ is that they are only a powerful standby — ready to intervene if necessary, but unlikely ever to be called into service.

If defibrillators were simply $50,000 life insurance policies, the relatively low rate of payoff might not matter much. But the long-shot statistics are significant to people who must weigh the risks of infection and malfunction after they have an electronic device anchored inside their hearts and its wires threaded through their arteries.

The slim odds also have large implications for the United States health care bill, adding billions of dollars annually to Medicare spending and to insurance payments. Dr. Larry A. Chinitz, director of the Heart Rhythm Center at New York University’s Langone Medical Center, said, “The answer isn’t just to keep implanting everybody” who fits the current guidelines.

More doctors are now thinking twice. From a peak of 160,000 new patients in 2005, the number has fallen to less than 140,000 last year, according to Lawrence H. Biegelsen, an analyst at Wachovia Capital Markets. He predicts this year’s total will end up even lower.

For the manufacturers, the numbers translate to a decline in defibrillator sales to $3.94 billion in this country last year, down from $4.29 billion in 2005, Mr. Biegelsen said.

Only overseas, where defibrillators have been slower to catch on, has the number of new implants continued to rise, hitting a new sales high of $1.93 billion last year.

Many patients, of course, are grateful for their defibrillators. “It’s saved me at least four times, including two when I passed out completely,” Matthew M. Murray, a 55-year-old former engineer in Riverbank, Calif., said of his implant.

And some experts worry that the pendulum may have swung too far away from defibrillators — putting countless lives at risk among people with the heart abnormalities and ailments most likely to cause cardiac arrest. At least several hundred thousand people in this country have such conditions, and some estimates place the figure at more than a million.

Medtronic, the leading maker of defibrillators, contends that each day 500 deaths are caused by sudden cardiac arrests among people who meet the current medical guidelines for the devices but do not have them.

(The NBC journalist Tim Russert, who died earlier this year, reportedly suffered a heart attack after an artery was blocked. While Mr. Russert had a history of heart disease, his condition was not one for which a defibrillator would have been prescribed.)

Dr. Eric N. Prystowsky, a nationally renowned heart rhythm specialist in Indianapolis, said every doctor in his field was haunted by individual cases, like that of a Purdue University graduate student who was referred to Dr. Prystowsky for a defibrillator. The student had an abnormally thick heart muscle, a known risk for sudden cardiac arrest.

“He kept putting it off,” Dr. Prystowsky said of the decision to get a defibrillator. “Six weeks later, his fiancée called to say he had been found dead in bed.”

Cases like that may be inevitable as long as doctors cannot give patients more certainty about whether a defibrillator will actually help them.

Better clues could be submerged in the medical records of the people who have gotten defibrillators over the decades. Three years ago, Medicare ordered the creation of a nationwide registry, or database, for implanted defibrillators. Overseen by two leading professional groups, the American College of Cardiology and the Heart Rhythm Society, the registry has amassed about 270,000 records from 1,500 hospitals.

But the data mining has only recently begun, and results are not expected before 2010 at the earliest.

There is no guarantee that the information will lead to more effective use of defibrillators. Unlike drugs, many medical devices evolve so quickly that long-term data on their performance can be obsolete by the time it is available.

There are also efforts to find genetic markers and to develop new diagnostic tests that might more precisely identify patients who are predisposed to the type of sudden cardiac arrest a defibrillator could prevent. So far, though, the only federally approved screening test identifies some patients who are unlikely to need a defibrillator in the next year — not those most likely to require one.

The defibrillator decline began after highly publicized reports of a small number of deadly malfunctions. The biggest blow came in June 2005, when the Guidant Corporation — later acquired by Boston Scientific — recalled 29,000 implanted defibrillators because of flaws that might have caused them to short-circuit instead of delivering critical shocks. At the time, at least two deaths had been linked to the failure.

Medtronic, the market leader, and St. Jude Medical, the third major player, subsequently announced product recalls, although neither was prompted by known deaths.

Heading into 2007, as those headlines faded, many analysts predicted a rebound in defibrillator sales. But last fall Medtronic recalled its newest version of the main wire that connects a defibrillator to the heart. A small percentage of the more than 200,000 Fidelis-brand leads that had been implanted were developing fractures suspected of either preventing some defibrillators from delivering shocks when needed or causing them to deliver unnecessary shocks.

Even with properly functioning devices, patients risk unnecessary shocks — jolts recipients often describe as a painful and frightening kick in the chest. “Almost as many get shocked unnecessarily as benefit,” Dr. Paul J. Hauptman, a professor of medicine at St. Louis University, said.

And even problem-free patients need surgery to replace their unit’s batteries when they run low. Most of today’s batteries are expected to last five to seven years. Manufacturers say patients generally get better software and longer battery life with each replacement. But the repeat procedures also raise costs and risks.

Meanwhile, there are signs that improved treatment of cardiac disease with drugs, diet and behavioral changes could be reducing the need for defibrillators. At a meeting of heart rhythm specialists in May in San Francisco, Dr. Douglas P. Zipes, an Indiana University medical professor, cited data suggesting a decline in the percentage of heart patients who suffered the kinds of heart stoppages that defibrillators were intended to address.

Hoping to stay relevant, the makers of defibrillators have been developing higher-priced devices with new features, including software to limit unnecessary shocks. Most are built to communicate wirelessly, allowing doctors to remotely monitor their performance. Many can perform other rhythm-regulating functions, like synchronizing contractions in different chambers of the heart.

“Adding additional therapy will get at more of the market,” said Daniel J. Starks, chief executive of St. Jude Medical, citing plans to add sensors that could warn of impending heart failure. But adding complexity could also make it even more difficult to calculate the costs and benefits of implanting the devices in the first place.

That bothers patients like one 50-year-old business consultant in the San Francisco Bay Area. The man, who declined to be identified for fear of alarming his clients, ignored recommendations from three doctors to get a defibrillator. Online research suggested his risk of sudden cardiac arrest would be 3 percent a year without a defibrillator — and about 1 percent with one.

Doctors thinking about thousands of patients might see that as a significant difference, he said. But for him, he said, it did not seem a fair tradeoff for becoming “part of the medical-industrial complex for the rest of your life.”

Source — The New York Times