Facebook fixes security flaw that exposes personal chats

London, May 6 (ANI): Social networking site Facebook has made haste to fix a security flaw that allowed its users to view the live chats of their friends and also see their pending friend requests.

All one needed to do to spy on their friends’ personal chat messages and see who requested to join their network, was use the site’s privacy setting to expose the personal information.

Facebook is said to have temporarily removed the chat facility while it fixed the flaw.

The exploit, originally reported by the blog TechCrunch, worked via an option in privacy settings that allows people to preview their profiles, as it would appear to their friends.

But it was never intended to show others what their friends were actually doing.

“For a limited period of time, a bug permitted some users’ chat messages and pending friend requests to be made visible to their friends by manipulating the ‘preview my profile’ feature of Facebook privacy settings,” the BBC quoted Facebook as saying in a statement.

“When we received reports of the problem, our engineers promptly diagnosed it and temporarily disabled the chat function.

“We also pushed out a fix to take care of the visible friend requests which is now complete,” it stated, adding that the chat function will be turned back on shortly.

Candid Wueest, security expert at Symantec, said that it is a matter of concern when an organisation is not able to provide security.

“For any organisation, whether you are a social networking site or not, privacy breaches are worrying,” Wueest said.

“Unfortunately, this isn’t the first privacy breach of its kind to plague a social networking site – other high-profile sites have also been affected with similar problems,” he revealed.

But he also praised Facebook’s quick response to the issue.

“Facebook has acted quickly in fixing the alleged flaw, whereas some social networking sites have been known to take days to fix issues reported,” he added. (ANI)

Reserve Bank indicates more rate hikes on the way

The Reserve Bank says the economic outlook for Australia appears considerably brighter than that of many other advanced economies.

The RBA says the current debt problems in Europe highlight the fact that many governments have a long way to go to escape their financial predicaments.

In a speech to the Australian Industry Group economic forum in Sydney, the Reserve Bank’s assistant governor, Philip Lowe, said many countries are dealing with large deficits and an ageing population is putting pressure on budgets.

Dr Lowe said in the years ahead, significant steps will have to be taken to bring public finances into line.

“The flexibility that they have to determine the timing and size of these steps is limited by the fact they went into the current downturn with already high levels of debt,” he said.

“As a results of the poor starting point, many are now treading a very narrow path.

“On the one hand, tightening fiscal policy in the very near term risks derailing the recovery, while not doing so risks a damaging loss of confidence.”

The RBA says its quick response to changing economic conditions has given it the flexibility to deal with any potential global economic upsets and that, while the outlook for Australia is mostly positive, there are still risks.

Dr Lowe says the RBA’s preference in regard to monetary policy is to act quickly, then take time to evaluate and make further adjustments if necessary.

“The alternative of waiting to see how these myriad risks evolve before adjusting policy runs the significant downside of moving too late, particularly given that the economy is starting this upswing with less spare capacity than in previous upswings,” he said.

“Fortunately in Australia we’ve had the policy flexibility to respond to changing events, and so far this has served us very well.”

The Reserve Bank also again indicated it will keep raising interest rates until they reach a more normal level.

“The important thing is the level of interest rates that borrowers face, not the cash rate,” Dr Lowe said.

“At the moment the mortgage rate is still around 50 basis points below the average of the last decade and a half.”

Master gene that switches on disease-fighting cells identified

London, Sep 14 (ANI): British scientists have identified the master gene, called E4bp4, that causes blood stem cells to turn into disease-fighting ‘Natural Killer’ (NK) immune cells.

The discovery, by researchers at Imperial College London, UCL and the Medical Research Council’s National Institute for Medical Research, could one day help scientists boost the body’s production of these frontline tumour-killing cells, creating new ways to treat cancer.

By ‘knocking out’ E4bp4 in a mouse model, the researchers created the world’s first animal model entirely lacking NK cells, but with all other blood cells and immune cells intact.

The breakthrough model should help solve the mystery of the role that Natural Killer cells play in autoimmune diseases, such as diabetes and multiple sclerosis.

According to many scientists, these diseases are a result of malfunctioning NK cells that turn on the body and attack healthy cells, which cause disease instead of fighting it.

They believe that clarifying NK cells’ role could lead to new ways of treating these conditions.

Natural Killer cells – a type of white blood cell – are a major component of the human body’s innate, quick-response immune system, providing a fast frontline defence against tumours, viruses and bacterial infections.

The gene E4bp4 is the ‘master gene’ for NK cell production, which means it is the primary driver that causes blood stem cells in the bone marrow to differentiate into NK cells.

Led by Dr Hugh Brady, the researchers are hoping to progress with a drug treatment for cancer patients which reacts with the protein expressed by their E4bp4 gene, causing their bodies to produce a higher number of NK cells than normal, to increase the chances of successfully destroying tumours.

“If increased numbers of the patient’s own blood stem cells could be coerced into differentiating into NK cells, via drug treatment, we would be able to bolster the body’s cancer-fighting force, without having to deal with the problems of donor incompatibility,” Nature quoted Brady as saying.

The researchers proved the pivotal role E4bp4 plays in NK production when they knocked the gene out in a mouse model.

Without E4bp4 the mouse produced no NK cells whatsoever but other types of blood cell were unaffected.

“Now finally, with our discovery of the NK cell master gene and subsequent creation of our mouse model, we will be able to find out if the progression of these diseases is impeded or aided by the removal of NK cells from the equation. This will solve the often-debated question of whether NK cells are always the ‘good guys’, or if in certain circumstances they cause more harm than good,” said Brady.

The study has been published in Nature Immunology. (ANI)