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The Office of the Information Commissioner has urged APRA to heed Australian privacy law as it develops its data protection guide for the finance sector.

In a draft guide released in December, APRA noted that it had become easier for banks and insurers to move their data to outsourcers, whether in Australia or offshore.

Just two years ago, companies kept their cloud usage quiet, largely due to APRA’s November 2010 warning that cloud computing was a form of outsourcing that needed its tick of approval.

But recent deals inked by the Commonwealth Bank, Bank of Queensland and CGU with Salesforce.com – a cloud-based CRM vendor with no Australian data centre – indicate that APRA’s data location requirements are not prohibitive.

The Office of the Information Commissioner referred APRA to Australia’s National Privacy Principle 9 and its upcoming replacement APP 8, which define when organisations may transfer Australians’ personal information to an offshore provider.

“NPP 9 generally prohibits an organisation from disclosing personal information to someone in a foreign country who is not subject to a comparable information privacy scheme,” the OAIC wrote in its submission to APRA.

“The scheme may be a law of that country regulating personal information-handling, a treaty or other instrument, or a contract.

“The OAIC recommends that the Draft Practice Guide expressly refer to the obligations regarding the handling of personal information set out in the Privacy Act.”

NPP 9 allows data to be offshored only with the individual’s consent, if the transfer is necessary for the organisation to provide a pre-contracted service provision, or if the transfer is “for the benefit of the individual” and likely to gain the consent of the individual.

APP8 , which comes into effect next March, is more prescriptive about how individuals’ consent is obtained, and makes organisations accountable for any data breaches their third party partners suffer.

Risk-based approach

To date, APRA has assessed financial institutions’ cloud computing plans on a case-by-case basis.

Its official position on cloud computing is outlined in its November 2010 letter and October 2006 prudential practice guide on outsourcing .

In the case of insurer CGU, only a subset of data is stored in the Salesforce.com cloud, including sales figures and account renewals.

That data is also replicated in CGU’s internal databases and displayed alongside locally hosted data via an integrated user interface.

Commonwealth Bank chief information officer Michael Harte said the regulator had been supportive of it moving applications – including its Commbank.com.au website – to Amazon Web Services.

“All they want is risk-weighted calculus on what you’re doing, [and] consultation on what you’re doing,” Harte told iTnews on the sidelines of an AIIA luncheon last week.

“Everytime we’ve taken something to them they’ve been very, very supportive and they’ve been helpful, telling us how we might even improve it. So yeah, we have a great relationship in that reg

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“We wanted to explore these perceptions of veteran programmers as being out of step with emerging technologies and see if we could determine whether older programmers are actually keeping up with changes in the field,” says Dr. Emerson Murphy-Hill, an assistant professor of computer science at NC State and co-author of a paper on the research. “And we found that, in some cases, veteran programmers even have a slight edge.”

The researchers looked at the profiles of more than 80,000 programmers on a site called StackOverflow, which is an online community that allows users to ask and answer programming questions. The site also allows users to rate the usefulness of other users’ questions and answers.

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Security holes in smartphone apps (w/ Videos)

Posted by Lola Lindeman On April - 25 - 2013 NO Comment

Zhendong Su, professor of computer science, said that his team has notified the app developers of the problems, although it has not yet had a response.

The security flaws were identified by graduate student Dennis (Liang) Xu, who collected about 120,000 free apps from the Android marketplace. The researchers focused initially on the Android platform, which has about a half-billion users worldwide. Android is quite different from Apple’s iOS platform, but there may well be similar problems with iPhone apps, Xu said.

The victim would first have to download a piece of malicious code onto their phone.

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Virgin turns airline loyalty into contactless credit cards

Posted by Lola Lindeman On April - 21 - 2013 NO Comment

Virgin Australia will integrate its 3.5 million member Velocity frequent flyer program program with a new prepaid, contactless credit card scheme in coming months.

To date, the airline has partnered with the likes of American Express and sister brand Virgin Money to offer frequent flyer points as a reward for credit card spend.

Virgin Money was acquired by the Bank of Queensland last week.

The new, opt-in Global Wallet program will issue Velocity members with new loyalty cards that feature Visa’s smart chip and contactless payWave technology.

Global Wallet users will be able to store money in multiple currencies on their accounts, to be used for purchases and to withdraw cash from compatible ATMs around the world.

Velocity data will continue to be held by Virgin, while transaction data will be held separately by partner Rev Worldwide.

Visa said the Global Wallet partnership was its first such airline partnership.

The airline has spent some $36 million on a major program of work that saw it flick the switch on a new Sabre ticketing and reservation system in January.

Global Wallet was announced this week, echoing the announcement of Qantas Cash by Qantas and MasterCard in February.

At the time, Qantas said it had no plans to move into personal banking and would remain “focused on running an airline and loyalty business”.

A Qantas spokeswoman said the airline held any data collected by its frequent flyer and Qantas Cash programs.

“Data collected is used to ensure the customer experience is enhanced and as relevant as possible for members,” she said.

Qantas Cash is expected to reach the market in the second half of 2013. Qanta

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They used theorem-proving techniques to analyze a control algorithm for a research robot that would help a surgeon perform surgery at the base of the skull. Their method identified a safety flaw that could enable a scalpel or other surgical tool to go dangerously astray in this area, where the eye orbits, ear canals and major arteries and nerves are closely spaced and vulnerable to injury. It also guided development of a new algorithm and verified that the new controller was safe and reliable.

“These techniques are going to change how people build robotic surgery systems,” predicted APL’s Yanni Kouskoulas, who led the research study with André Platzer, assistant professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon.

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Tags: Safety

The Benefits of Safelink Wireless

Posted by admin On April - 8 - 2013 NO Comment

Several states in the US such as Kentucky offer a service aimed at low income families. The government has partnered up with wireless firms to provide families with cell phones on a budget. This allows people to contact medical facilities or any other businesses when required. The wireless firms enroll families on a simple plan with no monthly bills to pay. Understandably these services are very popular with low income families who welcome the prospect of having one less bill to pay each month. To be eligible for these government schemes you have to be a family on a low income or in receipt of state benefits.

Safelink Wireless

Safelink Wireless is a phone company that participates in the scheme described above. Find more…

New smartphone platforms eye inroads in hot market

Posted by Lola Lindeman On April - 5 - 2013 NO Comment

A man checks his mobile phone at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona on February 29, 2012.

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