Wednesday, March 25, 2015

CDR-Data Corporation add feature in Security

For Immediate Release
2015
Pasadena, CA
CDR-Data Corporation add feature in Security







CDR-Data is announcing the new enhancements for eCDR© from the oldest call accounting ASP company. Security is critical for organizations and businesses. There are hundreds and thousands web attacks daily. To fight against this CDR-Data has developed new features in the username and password login. Here is a white paper from the FCC’s standards for security and login protection. 


These attacks can make a successful business go out of business in days. 

Here are some of the enhancements developed that our clients requested and/or needed. 

  • An account will be locked out if more the six failed logon attempts.
  • User session expires after fifteen minutes of inactivity.
  • Contain at least 3/4: Upper, lower case, alphanumeric, and special characters
  • Password will expire after ninety days, if not used.
  • The system/application prevents the last 6 passwords to be reused.

Not every employee needs access to all of your information. Keep your login information to yourself.

About CDR-Data Corporation
CDR-Data Corporation, based in Pasadena CA, www.cdrdata.com consists of a group of professionals with decades of experience in the telemanagement, call accounting and IT industry. By using an ASP environment, this team has consistently delivered proven products and services that provide answers to management's questions of telecommunications usage and billing. CDR-Data has gained its market share by consistently delivering high quality and flexible solutions to each and every CDR-Data client.

For More information:
CDR-Data Corporation              Judith Lopez                         626-791-7900
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Friday, March 6, 2015

Small business optimism at 8-year high as wages rise

 

Small business sector adds to upbeat employment data in painting a bullish picture of the economy even as dark clouds settle over the global economy.

U.S. small business optimism jumped in December to its highest level in more than eight years, underscoring the economy’s strengthening fundamentals despite slowing global growth.
The National Federation of Independent Business said on Tuesday its Small Business Optimism Index increased 2.3 points to 100.4 last month, the highest reading since October 2006.

The index, which crossed the 100 mark for the first time in eight years, is now back at its prerecession average. It was bolstered by a surge in sales expectations as well as hiring, capital outlays and business expansion plans.


“This is probably why the gross domestic product numbers have been looking better because the small business sector has actually started to contribute to growth,” William Dunkelberg, NFIB chief economist, told Reuters.

The small business sector, which is estimated to account for about half of the country’s overall GDP, added to upbeat employment data in painting a bullish picture of the economy even as dark clouds settle over the global economy.

The economy grew at a 5.0 percent annualized rate in the third quarter, the fastest in 11 years, and is expected to have maintained a solid growth pace in the October-December quarter.

More small business owners view their current inventory of goods as insufficient to meet the anticipated increase in sales, according to the NFIB survey.

This is consistent with recent government data showing an increase in stocks at wholesalers, which last week led economists to sharply raise their fourth-quarter GDP growth estimates to as high as a 3.7 percent rate.

Even more encouraging, small businesses are raising wages for workers, with a quarter of respondents in December reporting higher compensation — the largest share since January 2008.

That finding is at odds with a surprise drop in average hourly earnings in December’s employment report.

The NFIB compensation measure correlates closely with the government’s quarterly employment cost index, which is widely regarded as a better gauge of wage growth.
About 17 percent of businesses in the NFIB survey plan to raise compensation in the coming months.

“The reported gains in compensation are still in the range typical of an economy with reasonable growth, and labor market conditions are suggestive of a tightening, which will put further upward pressure on compensation,” said Dunkelberg.




Why on Earth Is IBM Still Making Mainframes?



This 1954 photo provided by IBM shows a 700-series Electronic Data Processing Machine.
IBM quit making PCs in 2005, and it quit making servers last year. But it looks like Big Blue will keep pumping out its mainframes forever.

On Tuesday, IBM launched the z13, which it bills as the first mainframe specifically designed to accommodate the booming mobile app economy. Mainframes—the refrigerator-sized, pre-PC computers beloved of government, corporations, and Tron—were long synonymous with IBM, which introduced its first mainframe in 1952. The company has long since reinvented itself as a provider of business services rather than hardware. But it turns out the old standby is still around.

The first mainframes were designed to serve Cold War clients like the US Department of Defense. (Its first mainframe, the IBM 701, was known as the Defense Calculator while under development.) The mainframe of today is designed to serve a very different world—and economy.
IBM's new z13 mainframe
 This 1954 photo provided by IBM shows a 700-series Electronic Data Processing Machine.


IBM claims the z13 mainframe is the first system able to process 2.5 billion transactions a day (or the equivalent of 100 Cyber Mondays every day, according to the company). It can encrypt mobile transactions in real-time and provide on-the-fly insights on all transactions that pass through it. This will help companies and governments improve fraud detection, IBM says, and it give them a live view of a client’s purchasing habits so they can push related promotions to consumers right when they’re in-store.

“We’re driving toward a world where more and more people are using mobile devices, or embedded devices, to interact with systems,” John Birtles, director of IBM z Systems, tells WIRED. “We need to make sure that those devices are secure, that the transaction’s secure, and that our clients get the level of analytics that gives them opportunities to improve their businesses.”

The concept of a “mobile transaction” is a bit of marketing-speak. Tons of transactions take place via mobile devices, and the mainframe is good at transaction processing. Put them together, and voila: a computer the size of a backyard shed becomes a mobile product.

Across so many industries—retailers, financial institutions, telecommunications services, insurance companies, airlines, and governments, to name just a few—transactions are going increasingly mobile. If you think about how much banking you do on your tablet or phone, or even how you might check in to your next a flight, this growth starts to make sense. And that’s not even counting the myriad payment processing schemes you might have tried, from PayPal to Square to Intuit.

IBM’s z13 mainframe is supposed to help with all of these tasks—along with any other business that gets done on a mobile platform. In order to get the job done, IBM says it has equipped the z13 with a processor that contains 300 percent more memory than found on most servers and 100 percent more bandwidth for speedier mobile transactions. The z13 also does analytics natively, rather than requiring data to be moved off the mainframe to other computing systems.

As developers of new applications come to rely on the ease and power of the cloud, the mainframe remains a powerhouse for tasks computers have performed for decades, such as transactions. IBM has realized it can no longer make money selling traditional hardware, and as of late, the company has been focusing its efforts on software and data analytics, including a recently announced partnership with Twitter. But investing in industrial-grade hardware still aligns with IBM’s focus on serving as an engine for business. Business is more mobile than ever. Yet however lightweight those mobile devices feel in your pocket, they can still make good use of a big, powerful machine chugging away in a back room, not going anywhere.

Friday, February 6, 2015

General Motors may 'kick the tires' on Google's self-driving car

Automaker says it'd be open to talking to Google about teaming up on driverless-car tech.

2014 Google Self-Driving Cars PrototypeGeneral Motors says it would consider the possibility of partnering with Google to build self-driving cars, according to the automaker's chief technology officer.

Speaking to Reuters in an interview published Monday, CTO Jon Lauckner says his company would "certainly be open to having a discussion" with Google about partnering to build a self-driving car.

"You have to figure out how would something like that actually work," Lauckner told Reuters. "Would it be something where it would be an opportunity to work together in a joint development agreement? I'd say probably anybody who's interested ought to at least go over and kick the tires," he added.

Google has been logging thousands of miles of road time on its driverless car since it revealed in 2010 it was working on the technology. Over the past several years, the Internet giant has unveiled incremental improvements. In December, Google showed off its first complete working prototype. (That compares with a previous version that didn't have a steering wheel or real headlights.) The technology uses a series of sensors to detect objects, analyze what they are and respond accordingly.

In a statement to The Wall Street Journal last month, Chris Urmson, the head of Google's autonomous vehicle project, said that the prototype relies on 64 lasers that scan across 360 degrees, a camera and GPS map data to generate a map of its surroundings and drive safely. Google uses software and algorithms to make the car react to predictable and unpredictable scenarios.

That GM is at least considering working with Google on a self-driving car is good news for the search giant. Last month, Urmson told the Journal that Google does not "particularly want to become a car maker," adding that his company was in talks with automakers.

Urmson is scheduled to speak Wednesday at the Automotive World News Congress in Detroit, where he could announce plans for partnering with automakers, according to Reuters. 

Google has been flirting with car partnerships for at least the past couple of years. In 2013, Elon Musk, founder and CEO of electric-car maker Tesla, said he held "some technical discussions with Google." However, he went on to say that it was unlikely he would ink a deal with Google because the company's laser technology is too expensive. Musk also said that he would likely build his own autopilot system.

At the Consumer Electronics Show last week, Mercedes-Benz showed off its own self-driving concept car, called the F 015, that looks more like a living room inside than an actual vehicle. That car does not rely on Google's auto-driving technology.

Still, Google has formed relationships in the car industry, announcing last year that it had inked deals with Honda, Audi and GM to deliver cars that include its Android operating system. 

Whatever technology companies use, it appears self-driving cars will be hitting roadways in increasing numbers in the coming years. The trouble for all of the players is getting the go-ahead to put autonomous cars on the road. As of this writing, in the US just a handful of states allow self-driving cars, including Florida and California. 

Neither Google nor GM immediately responded to a request for comment.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

New York City Launches City-Specific ID Card

NYC is joining a small group of municipalities offering city identification cards to its residents.

 

Residents of New York City will soon have a chance to receive a free, city-specific ID card.

In an attempt to bring official documentation to disenfranchised groups like illegal immigrants and the formerly incarcerated, a new ID card -- available only to those living within city bounds -- will be offered starting mid-January. Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration said the program, called IDNYC, will help to enhance public safety by providing more people with identification and help to fight inequality. Funded through the mayor’s office with city funds, the 2015 budget for the program is $8.4 million.

“We are launching the most ambitious municipal ID program in the country, by scale, benefits, security and privacy,” NYC Commissioner of Immigrant Affairs Nisha Agarwal wrote in an email to Government Technology. “The IDNYC program underscores Mayor de Blasio’s commitment to fighting inequality and integrating into our communities the most vulnerable New Yorkers, including undocumented immigrants, homeless individuals and disconnected young adults.”

The new ID card will not serve as a replacement for existing ID cards because the card will not be usable to purchase tobacco or alcohol, receive public assistance benefits, travel by air, gain work authorization or grant immigrant status. The card is intended as a supplementary ID or alternative for those who can't obtain legitimate identification otherwise.

Several California municipalities offer citizens city-specific ID, including Los Angeles, Oakland, Richmond and San Francisco. Washington, D.C.; New Haven, Conn.; Asbury Park, N.J.; Mercer County, N.J.; and Monmouth County, N.J., also offer similar identification.

Benefits of IDNYC include access to city buildings and some city services, and carriers will receive a free one-year membership to 33 cultural institutions, such as museums, zoos and concert halls.

In addition, the New York Police Department (NYPD) recently reported that it would recognize the identification. As such, the city anticipates the program will reduce arrests because low-level offenders that would have otherwise been arrested can now be issued summonses. NYPD reported that IDNYC will be an acceptable form of identification in the issuance of summonses, desk appearance tickets and property claims. NYPD Commissioner William Bratton said the program is “part of our larger mission to forge public trust with the communities we serve.”

Those who apply for IDNYC will be required to prove identity and residency in New York City. Acceptable proof of identity will include things like foreign passports or drivers' licenses. Residency can be proved by providing things like a U.S. driver’s license, property lease or utility bill. All city residents ages 14 and older will be eligible for IDNYC, and applications will be available in 25 languages.

Not everyone sees the program as a great social equalizer. Chairman of the Conservative Party of New York State Michael Long said the program is costly and encourages law breakers by legitimizing illegal immigrants.

“New Yorkers are already the highest-taxed citizens, especially New York City citizens, in the country, and we don’t need to be spending this kind of money on this kind of program,” Long said, adding that he doesn’t believe IDNYC will reduce strain on the police force.

“I don’t think that’s realistic at all. The NYPD has to accept the ID, they have to enforce the regulations that are imposed by city council or the mayor,” he said. “I think [de Blasio] ought to worry about how he has made the New York Police Department disenfranchised and feel unwanted. I think he should be trying to work on his relations with the law enforcement in the city of New York and stop worrying about the feelings of people who are law breakers in our city.”

At a recent NYPD graduation ceremony, de Blasio was booed by some members of the crowd, and some crowd members turned their backs to the mayor as he spoke. As anti-police sentiment grows following the Michael Brown shooting in Ferguson, Mo., and the Dec. 20 murder of two NYPD officers, Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos, de Blasio continues to fight a perception held by some that he is unsupportive of police.

http://www.govtech.com/dc/articles/New-York-City-Launches-City-Specific-ID-Card.html

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

IDEA Lab Injects Entrepreneurial Tactics into Federal Health Services

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services creates new lab to test startup techniques with federal health and safety services.

 Health and Human Services CTO Bryan Sivak speaks on open data initiatives at the Health & Human Services Open DataFest on Jan. 21, 2014.

Government can’t be what it used to be. Times have changed. The rote processes, repetitive tasks, drilled in duties — they all represent luxuries (albeit monotonous luxuries) of a fading past.

This is the impetus behind the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services newest enterprise, the HHS IDEA Lab. The name itself is an acronym, “IDEA” meant to encapsulate the motives of Innovation, Design, Entrepreneurship and, above all else, Action. At its most basic, the lab incentivizes to reimagine the department’s bureaucratic processes. Fully realized, it’s hoped to systematize innovative thinking inside HHS for the future.

“In the 21st century, things are changing at such a rapid pace, both from a technology perspective and from a societal perspective, that if we want government to be effective, then we need to have an organization that can be proactive — or immediately reactive — without the constraints and confines bureaucracy places on it,” said Bryan Sivak, HHS chief technology officer and the lab’s founder.

In tangible terms, what this means for Sivak is a lab that lifts those confines with three essential ingredients: education and time, and the money to make things happen.

These are channeled into the lab’s three initiatives.

The first initiative is all about investing in its workforce. This happens through an annual awards program and an internal accelerator for idea development. The awards program, HHS Innovates, recognizes employees who exhibit productive out-of-the-box thinking; the accelerator, HHS Ignites, equips chosen teams with $5,000 and a three-month runway to develop ideas.

The second initiative doesn’t look inside the agency for inspiration and talent, but outside, turning to the private and nonprofit sectors. In-residence programs, such as the HHS Innovators-in-Residence program, enlist outsiders for one to two years to research methods that improve practices. The HHS Entrepreneurs-In-Residence program, the initiative’s other tool, offers HHS employees the opportunity to hire outside talent for year-long “high-risk, high-reward” projects.

The third initiative promotes collaboration by creating groups that are assigned to answer specific problems. And depending the problem, Sivak said, the duration of these varies. Groups may end after they’ve solved a challenge; however, for large-scale undertakings, they can be ongoing.

“Really, when you think about it, the main goal is to provide a new set of incentives for the folks that work here,” Sivak said, “To help people to move us from this world — where we blindly follow process — to one where we’re free to experiment and focus on outcomes,” Sivak said.

As he is fond to reiterate, this often boils down to culture change. Real culture change, not just lip service and buzzwords associated with innovation. In an organization so bureaucratic and complex as HHS, so risk averse and tied in red tape, Sivak said he’s aware that cultural and behavioral shifts will come slowly and by degrees. Yet the lab is meant to incubate growth and serve as a safe haven for entrepreneurial activity.

 

Igniting Ingenuity


Already in its third installment, the HHS Ignite accelerator is evidence of the lab’s headway. Literally dozens of projects have been funded, and some, such as a redesign of the hospital check-in process, have saved HHS millions through efficiencies.

Taking a page from bootstrapping startups, the accelerator directs teams to submit project concepts that answer a visible need. Winning one of the 12 or so spots is the goal. And if approved, each team goes on to  fashion a “low-res” prototype — essentially a minimum viable product — for their idea. This creation is carefully scrutinized by 15 target customers for input. Finally, with more research, guidance from mentors and their collected customer feedback, teams craft and present a final prototype to HHS judges. The successful projects are deployed inside HHS — additional funding and resources given based on needs.

“It offers a means through which we can bring startup methodologies and the entrepreneurial spirit into operations,” said Read Holman, the lab’s program manager and Sivak’s senior advisor of internal entrepreneurship. “So, regardless of whether these projects move forward or not, the teams themselves leave Ignite with methodologies and problem solving techniques they can apply to their other work.”

As a paragon of Ignite’s methodologies, Sivak showcased the “Hospital Check-in Redesign” project, a system that fast-tracks patients through emergency rooms by prioritizing patients with quick needs. The idea was devised by Marliza Rivera, Alysia Cardona and Jose Burgos at the HHS Indian Health Service (IHS), a federal health-care provider for Native Americans and Alaska Natives. After a few iterations, Sivak said the trio decreased the percentage of unseen emergency room patients at Arizona’s Whiteriver Indian Hospital from 19 percent to just over 1 percent. Similarly the team estimated that, with a relatively small investment — $80,000-$100,000 —  worth of facility renovations, the hospital could see an additional $6 million in added
revenues.

“I love this story,” Sivak said, “because you’ve got these three people where this isn’t even in their job description, but they had this great idea, and they went for it.”

The lab hopes to breed similarly impactful projects in the near future. In its latest round, Ignite has a total of 28 new finalists from 72 submissions. On Dec. 8, Holman and Sivak will pare these down to 10 or 12 lucky winners.

http://www.govtech.com/health/IDEA-Lab-Injects-Entrepreneurial-Tactics-in-Federal-Health-Services.html

Monday, November 24, 2014

Retailer-Backed Apple Pay Rival CurrentC Has Been Hacked, Testers’ Email Addresses Stolen

 


MCX (Merchant Customer Exchange), the coalition of retailers including Walmart, Best Buy, Gap and others, who are backing a mobile payments solution CurrentC meant to rival newcomer Apple Pay, has been hacked. The data breach involves the theft of email addresses, but the CurrentC mobile application was not affected, the company confirms to TechCrunch.

Within the last 36 hours, MCX says it learned that unauthorized third parties obtained the email addresses of some of its CurrentC pilot program participants and other individuals who had expressed interest in the app.

The group has now notified its merchant partners about the incident and is communicating directly with those individuals whose email addresses were involved, a company spokesperson tells us.

At this time, it appears that only the emails of these early mobile app testers have been stolen, which is not as significant a data breach as having payment data or other personal information taken, like home addresses or phone numbers, has been the case with other large-scale data breaches, like the one which took place over the last holiday season at Target.

In addition, many of these email address were dummy accounts used for testing purposes, which means there may not be that many end users affected at this point, as the solution was still in its pilot phases.
However, MCX says it’s continuing to investigate the situation and will provide more updates as they arrive.

Below, is the email being shared with these users, in its entirety:

Thank you for your interest in CurrentC. You are receiving this message because you are either a participant in our pilot program or requested information about CurrentC. Within the last 36 hours, we learned that unauthorized third parties obtained the e-mail addresses of some of you. Based on investigations conducted by MCX security personnel, only these e-mail addresses were involved and no other information.

 In an abundance of caution, we wanted to make you aware of this incident and urge you not to open links or attachments from unknown third parties. Also know that neither CurrentC nor Merchant Customer Exchange (MCX) will ever send you emails asking for your financial account, social security number or other personally identifiable information. So if you are ever asked for this information in an email, you can be confident it is not from us and you should not respond.

MCX is continuing to investigate this situation and will provide updates as necessary. We take the security of your information extremely seriously, apologize for any inconvenience and thank you for your support of CurrentC.
It’s unclear at this time how exactly the addresses were stolen. As dummy accounts were taken, too, that would seem to rule out a phishing scheme. Phishing requires getting users to click malicious links or taking some other action, and is usually kicked off by sending users a legitimate-sounding email in order to trick them. It’s not likely that the creators of the dummy accounts would have responded to phishing attempts.

CurrentC’s maker MCX, for those unfamiliar, is a group of over 50 retailers who have been working to develop their own mobile wallet technology. Essentially, they want to own the mobile wallet experience for themselves, instead of turning it over to a company like Apple, whose Apple Pay mobile payments solution prevents them from gaining access to customer data. Instead, retailers involved with MCX want to use mobile payments as a way to learn more about their customers’ shopping behavior, which could mean they could better target offers to them in the future.

The system works via a mobile application, live now on the app stores, called CurrrentC. It’s sort of a clunky tool when compared with Apple Pay, as it involves the use of QR codes. But some retailers, like Starbucks, have seen success with QR codes, and these special barcodes aren’t tied to one platform, like Apple’s, so it makes sense that this is the technology the retailers would adopt. (More information on CurrentC is here.)

CurrentC began making headlines recently, when retailers involved with the initiative shut off NFC in their stores. NFC is the technology that makes Apple Pay and other NFC-based payment solutions, including Google Wallet, work. Customers were trying to use Apple Pay at stores like Rite Aid and CVS, where at first Apple Pay-initiated payments were functioning properly, thanks to the retailers NFC-enabled point-of-sale terminals.

But then those retailers disabled NFC at their registers, ending their unofficial support for Apple Pay. The problem, apparently, stemmed from the fact that retailers’ contracts with MCX states they’re not supposed to accept rival mobile payment products. (Walgreens, an Apple Pay partner, has taken advantage of this situation, telling customers via social media that #ChoiceIsEverything.)

With interesting timing, MCX this morning published a blog post to clear up misconceptions about its technology and its aims as a company. One section in the post discussed the security aspects to CurrentC, saying “the technology choices we’ve made take consumers’ security into account at every aspect of their core functionality.”

After a number of high-profile data breaches in recent months, which have seen consumer data stolen from Target, Home Depot, Nieman Marcus, Staples, P.F. Chang’s, Supervalu, and others, there’s a feeling among consumers that retailers should not be trusted with our sensitive information, including payment card data and other personal details any longer.

Perhaps the CurrentC hackers agree, and decided to make that point by way of this latest hack.