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Monday, January 6, 2014
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Morta_Security

In its first acquisition, security company Palo Alto Networks is acquiring stealthy cyber security startup Morta Security. Financial details were not disclosed about the transaction, but Morta raised over $1 million from Andreessen Horowitz, Data Collective, Greylock Partners, Norwest Venture Partners, Data Collective, Larry Link, and Peter Wagner.


While the startup remained in stealth over the past year and didn’t reveal any details on its product, Morta was developing a new technology to counter advanced cyber threats. The startup is based on the premise that traditional layered network defense is broken and their offering will actually be able to fend off advanced attackers from complex hacks and more.


The Morta team brings an interesting set of skills and deep expertise to Palo Alto Networks, gained through experience at the NSA, the US Air Force, and others. Palo Alto Networks says the acquisition will help its WildFire threat protection offerings, including the development of new toolsets that will accelerate the detection of sophisticated cyber threats and enable advanced protection capabilities for Palo Alto Networks enterprise security platform customers.


For background, Palo Alto Networks’s proprietary hardware and software detects data threats as they come into an enterprise environment. It’s made for the new types of attacks that come through the web in the form of malware. The company’s offering is designed for all the ways people access the web, either through their laptops or their mobile devices. What makes Palo Alto Networks distinct is that it goes beyond what traditional firewalls are capable of doing. Most networking technology is meant for threats that come from basic email or web browsing. But today’s threats come in the form of botnet attacks and other modern techniques, such as phishing attacks.


In a call with TechCrunch today, Palo Alto’s founder and CTO Nir Zuk says tat there is a new generation of sophisticated threats for enterprise networks including sandboxing and others. Malware was part of the first and second generation of attacks, he adds. But with the third generation, there are little protections from these more sophisticated attacks. Shah says his technology addresses detection of this third generation of attacks.


Morta will help the company detect and prevent some of the world’s more advanced cyber attacks, and has said in the past that it has an “unconventional approach to security” because the core team has expertise from playing “critical roles in cyber defense at places such as the National Security Agency and US Military.” These tools, technologies and experiences from Morta’s talent will be brought to Palo Alto Networks, says Shah.


This acquisition is certainly interesting considering the recent acquisition of Mandiant by security company FireEye for $1 billion. Zuk compared Mandiant to “the Ghostbusters of cyber security,” meaning that the company cleans up the mess after it happens. Morta and Palo Alto, he says, is actually tackling the problem at a different place–at the detection level.


While the Morta deal is significantly smaller, and the functions of the startups vary, perhaps we’ll be seeing more consolidation in the network and cyber security world in 2014.







1:09 PM

In its first acquisition, security company Palo Alto Networks is acquiring stealthy cyber security startup Morta Security . Financial detail...

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lg-webos-tv-smart-tv-ces-635

LG’s putting webOS to good use – as the basis for its new smart TV platform. The operating system has taken many turns in its long and varied history, starting out as a smartphone platform under Palm and then later finding a home at HP through acquisition, as a basis for the doomed HP TouchPad. Finally, it’s now ended up at LG.


I spoke to LG’s Itai Vonshak, the VP of Design and Product Management for webOS at the company, about what his newly integrated company brings to the table for LG and for smart TVs. The key ingredient is bringing the power of HTML5 and the native web to LG’s TV hardware in as seamless a way as possible.


This is just the beginning for LG’s webOS plans, too. Vonshak didn’t have anything more specific to share about the company’s plans for webOS on other platforms including connected appliances and smartphones than what LG said on stage, but the company did reveal it’s a least taking steps in those directions.


WebOS may end up becoming the platform that outlives us all at this rate, but for now just watching to see how it impacts the race for the best, most-connected smart TV platform is interesting enough.







1:09 PM

LG’s putting webOS to good use – as the basis for its new smart TV platform. The operating system has taken many turns in its long and vari...

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ascendmate2-01

Oh how times have changed. When Huawei showed off its flagship smartphone at CES last year, it did so in a smallish conference room with some chairs in the middle and crudites and demo phones flanking the sides. This time, Huawei nabbed itself a ballroom and bisected it with a stage and a giant screen to highlight its latest and greatest giant smartphone, the Ascend Mate 2.


Maybe the company can take some of their CES budget and use it to come up with some better names.


I’m being flippant, but it’s not hard to see that this year’s Huawei is far more confident and aggressive. Sadly, that change in posture doesn’t really show in the Ascend Mate 2 hardware. Externally you’re left with a largely nondescript device: plenty of glossy plastic and shiny highlights, hardly a far cry from the unit Huawei trotted out last year. The spec sheet is ultimately what’s going to raise a few eyebrows, but even that is going to depend a bit on your geography — a U.S. spec model will sport one of Qualcomm’s quad-core Snapdragon 400 chipsets clocked at up to 1.6GHz while the China-bound version will instead pack one of Huawei’s own HiSense chips.


Now, testing performance in the field is always a bit of a crapshoot, but the my brief moments with the device were nothing but solid; even the slightly overwrought Emotion UI that Huawei is so fond of runs remarkably smoothly. It’s worth pointing out that there’s quite a bit at play in terms of software here — neat UI flourishes, the ability to open and position multiple app windows, and an awfully cool Phone Manager app all round out the experience nicely.


Granted, this isn’t final hardware so we’ll hold off on judging too harshly until we get our hands on some retail models. Sadly though all the devices on hand lacked SIM cards so I couldn’t attempt to take the thing for a ride on Vegas’s LTE airwaves — a shame considering the Mate 2 supports LTE Cat 4, which could potentially make for data speeds up to 150 mbps.


Even considering all the functionality that the Ascend Mate 2 brings to the table, the phone just doesn’t seem made to click with everyone. The 6.1-inch 720p EHD display, while rather pretty and viewable from even the most oblique angles, is going to be too hefty for most people. That smartphone manufacturers are slowly blurring the line between phones and tablets isn’t a surprise, but that push for ever-larger phone screens always seems more like blatant one-upmanship than innovation for consumers’ sakes.


And perhaps my favorite not-so-little thing: the ability to connect the Mate 2 to another smartphone via a USB cable, at which point Huawei’s phone will act as a battery and charge its competitors. It sounds like a recipe for disaster until you remember that the Ascend Mate 2 sports a massive 4,050mAh battery which should apparently see it through 2 full days before needing a charge.


As I’ve said before, I’m going to hold off on any further judgment, but Huawei has itself a solid contender on its hands here. Is it going to set the U.S. market on fire? I doubt it, but the progress and performance may just be enough to keep Huawei on people’s minds and that’s the real endgame here.







12:10 PM

Oh how times have changed. When Huawei showed off its flagship smartphone at CES last year, it did so in a smallish conference room with som...

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mashable

Mashable has raised $13 million in Series A funding. CNN (which was previously rumored to be in talks to buy Mashable) broke the news, and Mashable has confirmed the funding in a post of its own.


Founded in 2005, the site has since expanded from its initial focus from tech, particularly social media, to include entertainment, lifestyle, and other news. In the funding post, founder Pete Cashmore writes that Mashable reaches more than 30 million monthly visitors, with a team of more than 120 full-time employees, and that this is the company’s “first ever capital raise.”


The round was led by Updata Partners (a growth equity firm), Mashable says, with participation from New Market Ventures Partners, Social Starts, Buddy Media co-founders Michael and Kass Lazerow, Iglo Group CEO Elio Leoni Sceti, and Havas Global CEO David Jones.







11:54 AM

Mashable has raised $13 million in Series A funding. CNN (which was previously rumored to be in talks to buy Mashable) broke the news , an...

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dish

Satellite TV provider Dish is expanding the number of ways that viewers can gain access to its content at CES this year.


It’s doing that with support for live, recorded, and on-demand video streaming to iOS, Android, and Kindle Fire tablets and mobile devices through a new group of Dish Anywhere apps. It’s also launching a new “troop” of Joey set-top boxes, building new functionality into the next generation of devices and introducing virtual interfaces for PS3, PS4, and LG Smart TVs.


At its presentation ahead of the show, Dish unveiled its most powerful Joey set-top box to date, the SuperJoey. Combined with Dish’s Hopper whole-home DVR, the SuperJoey will allow households to record up to eight shows at once. By adding another couple of tuners, the Hopper and SuperJoey can record four cable TV shows in addition to the four broadcast networks that are automatically recorded.


That should eliminate channel conflicts for most homes… that is, unless they are either really big or really crazy about recording things to their DVR.


Troop of DISH JoeysDish is also introducing the Wireless Joey, which provides customers more flexibility in making their live and recorded programs available throughout the house. Previously, subscribers needed their set-top boxes to be connected by coax cable run throughout the house.


But with the Wireless Joey, users can stream their live and recorded TV programs to any TV in the house, thanks to a thin client with an 802.11ac WiFi connections.


Not only will subscribers have more options when it comes to Joey set-top boxes they can install around the home, but they will also be able to connect virtually through devices they already own. To support this, Dish will have “virtual Joey” clients available for Sony’s PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 devices, as well as LG Smart TVs.


In addition to the new Joey products, Dish has also updated its mobile apps for iOS and Android, and is adding the Kindle Fire into the mix. The new Dish Anywhere apps will have a new feature that allows subscribers to transfer recordings from their Hopper, allowing them to watch their favorite programs on the go.


super joeyThe new apps also have integrated voice search capabilities, with natural language processing that allows users to find the programs that they want to watch and control their TV. That includes the ability to search content by title, actor, or genre.


For Dish, the announcements are part of a larger strategy by the company to enable subscribers to access the content they want anywhere, at any time. It’s been working toward that goal for years, but the new apps and Joey capabilities get it one step closer to achieving it.


Since this is CES, no launch dates for the products were announced. But the company expects the virtual Joey apps and the new Dish Anywhere for Kindle Fire to be released in the first quarter, with the Wireless Joey becoming available in the spring.







11:23 AM

Satellite TV provider Dish is expanding the number of ways that viewers can gain access to its content at CES this year. It’s doing that wit...

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Certain advertisements on Yahoo's European website may have helped infect thousands of computers with malware, according to Yahoo. A Dutch computer security firm, Fox-IT, outed Yahoo last Friday, penning a blog post claiming that attackers had used ads.yahoo.com to insert malicious ads. Fox-IT was apparently on to something, because on Sunday, Yahoo admitted to hosting ads that didn't "meet out editorial guidelines" -- a nice way of saying the ads spread malware. Mac computers and mobile devices were reportedly insulated from the malware.


9:39 AM

Certain advertisements on Yahoo's European website may have helped infect thousands of computers with malware, according to Yahoo. A D...

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CB35_ANGLE3

Here at CES 2014, Toshiba has just unveiled a new Chromebook, running Google’s Chrome OS on a 13.3-inch display for the first time, and priced below the $300 mark.


This is the company’s first step into Chrome territory, while competitors like Dell, Lenovo, HP, and Acer have been pumping out the light-as-air notebooks for a while now.


The Toshiba Chromebook is powered by an Intel Haswell chip, with a promised battery life of nine hours.


Meanwhile, the laptop sports a 13.3-inch 1366 x 768 display, with a .8-inch profile at 3.3 pounds.


On the inside, alongside that Haswell processor, you’ll find 16GB of SSD storage, 2GB of RAM, as well as dual-band 802.11 a/b/g/n Wifi. And once you have Wifi on a Chromebook, the magic really begins.


These devices run on a Chrome OS, which is essentially a beefed up Chrome browser. This means that access to various applications and programs is limited to web apps.


However, Google is working to make the browser experience as complete as possible with the help of Google Apps and Gchat + Hangouts.


Toshiba’s Chromebook is available for $279 starting on February 16.


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9:39 AM

Here at CES 2014, Toshiba has just unveiled a new Chromebook , running Google’s Chrome OS on a 13.3-inch display for the first time, and pri...

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