Posts Tagged ‘kohli’

Tej Kohli’s Amusing Business Facts

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

Tej Kohli business blog brings some amusing business facts, the kinds of which you have not heard before.

Do you know?

  • Bill Bowerman, the co-founder of the shoe company Nike, got his first shoe idea after staring at a waffle iron. This gave him the idea of using squared spikes to make the shoes lighter.
  • Bill Gates house was partially designed using a Macintosh computer.
  • In the late 1960’s, Mountain Dew bottles featured a hillbilly on them. These are now collector items worth five to ten dollars.
  • In 1949 UNICEF produced the first charity Christmas card. The picture shown on the card was painted by a seven year old girl.
  • 18% of an Americans income is spent on transportation.
  • 7-Eleven is the largest retail chain in the world.
  • According to research, the most productive workday is Tuesday and the least productive is Friday.
  • American Airlines saved $40,000 in 1987 by eliminating one olive from each salad served in first class.
  • Americans write approximately 50 billion checks a year making it the second most frequent payment method used after cash.
  • Americans write approximately 50 billion checks a year making it the second most frequent payment method used after cash.
  • Approximately 7.5% of all office documents get lost.
  • Bill Gates began programming computers at age 13.
  • Bill Gates donated close to $100 million to fight AIDS in India. As a percent of his total wealth, this would be comparable to him donating ten cents if he only had $60.
  • Coupons were introduced in 1894 when Asa Candler bought the Coca-Cola formula for $2,300 and gave people coupons that he had written out to receive a free glass of coke.
  • Duracell, the battery-maker, built parts of its new international headquarters using materials from its own waste.

Is The Storm Worm Blowing Over?

Friday, March 7th, 2008

Tej Kohli gives a report on storm worm courtesy Internetnews.com.

A report by e-mail and content security firm Marshal claims that just six botnets  are responsible for almost 90 percent of spam, but others in the spam filtering business disagree with the report’s findings.

For the month of February, Marshal found that the most dominant botnet spewing out junk e-mail was not the vaunted Storm worm but a network called Srizbi, which first emerged last summer. Symantec reports Srizbi as a “Trojan horse that sends spam and uses a rootkit to hide itself.”

Srizbi seems to be in the seeding stage, as it were, because all it’s doing now is perpetuating itself. It sends out spam to other people so they open a link that infects them with the Srizbi Trojan

Marshal has it accounting for 39 percent of spam it discovered in February. Just the month prior, the botnet Mega-D, so dubbed because it was selling male sexual enhancement products, was the major nuisance, with 35 percent of the spam.

Glen Myers, an engineer with Marshal, said Mega-D lost its place because it shut down for 10 days. Why he does not know, but he said that didn’t lessen the amount of spam on the Internet. “It just moved to other networks. That’s why other networks came in so high,” he told InternetNews.com. “I don’t know if that means there’s a relation between people running botnets or if advertisers are moving their content around.”

Storm, by contrast, only accounted for two percent of the spam in the Marshal report. That seems extremely low considering how resilient and ubiquitous the worm was. “Storm got a lot of publicity, and people started specifically targeting that worm. That is impacting their ability to use it,” said Myers.

Paul Piccard, director of threat research for Webroot Software, agrees on that point. “We have seen a decrease in the Storm network. There’s been less instances and samples of Storm that we’ve seen recently. There’s been a large push by security vendors to roll out signatures that detect and remove Storm,” he said.

However, he’s not so sure that just six botnets are responsible for the millions of spam messages floating around on the Internet. “If it was only six, we would have a much easier time protecting our customers, said Piccard. “It’s a little misleading to say there’s six botnets because there’s multiple variants of each. There are some times close to 100 variants to specific pieces of malware.”

Scott Montgomery, vice president of global technical strategy for Secure Computing, was even more blunt in his assessment. “Their premise is that the snapshot from their spam traps constitutes fact. Srizbi is a pretty neat little Trojan, I just think their scale is way off. To think this ten million machine behemoth Storm botnet is not relevant, I don’t think is reflective of what’s going on,” he said.

But Myers defends the findings, saying it’s a “true application of the 80/20 rule, that 80 percent of the spam comes from the top 20 percent of botnets. We’ve already seen an example of this in February when the Mega-D botnet went down and everything moved to Srizbi.”

As security gets better at blocking Storm, he argues, spammers “are less likely to send out waves of Storm as they get diminishing returns because everyone is looking for Storm. How many people are looking for Rustock?” he said, in reference to a botnet that said accounted for 20 percent of spam in February.

Don’t count Storm out, warned Piccard. “Remember, when you can create variants very quickly and create new pieces of malware, it’s not uncommon for malware to make a comeback later on,” he said. “Right now could be a quiet period for Storm but we could see an uptick in activity in a few weeks to a month from now.”

What’s up with US Mortgage Market?

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

According to a survey released Monday, the ailing mortgage market and and the debt burden being carried by tens of millions of households in US, has become a major concern for US economists.

They are majorly concerned over the short-term risks associated with subprime mortgages and other forms of indebtness, while they continue to cast a wary eye on inflation, says President of National Association for Business Economics, last week.

About 34 percent of the members of the National Association for Business Economics ranked the financial market turmoil from those loan defaults as the No. 1 threat to the economy over the next two years.

Concerns about mounting inflationary pressures and slowing job growth have persuaded many economists that the world’s largest economy is going into a recession although other economists and experts believe a recession will be avoided.

Internet Marketing

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

Internet marketing is the latest addition to the Tej Kohli Blog. Read an introductory article on internet marketing from Wikipedia.

Internet marketing, also referred to as online marketing or Emarketing, is the marketing of products or services over the Internet. The Internet has brought many unique benefits to marketing including low costs in distributing information and media to a global audience. The interactive nature of Internet marketing, both in terms of instant response and in eliciting response, are unique qualities of the medium.

Internet marketing ties together creative and technical aspects of the internet, including design, development, advertising and sales. Internet marketing methods include search engine marketing, display advertising, e-mail marketing, affiliate marketing, interactive advertising, reputation management and also Social Media Marketing Methods such as blog marketing, and viral marketing.

Internet marketing is the process of growing and promoting an organization using online media. Internet marketing does not simply mean ‘building a website’ or ‘promoting a website’. Somewhere behind that website is a real organization with real goals.

AVG Adds Link Scanning to Antivirus Suite

Thursday, February 28th, 2008

I came across an article on internetnews.com. Read the latest story on the Tej Kohli Blog.

 AVG Technologies is the latest antivirus vendor to beef up its security suite to cover as wide a range of threats as possible by including link-scanning technology it acquired late last year.

AVG (which changed its name from Grisoft earlier this year) isn’t as well known in the U.S. as Symantec, McAfee or Trend Micro, but it has a huge international presence, particularly in Europe where it is based. It consistently scores very high in antivirus tests against known threats, but its tests against zero-day threats are a little more inconsistent.

That’s one area it’s working to overcome, and one step in the process was the December acquisition of Exploit Prevention Labs, developer of LinkScanner, a utility that scans the links of search results on Google, Yahoo and other search engines to check for hidden malware behind the link. While the company is also working on its heuristics to catch as-yet undiscovered viruses, it’s also trying to help users avoid infection in the first place.

In addition to the LinkScanner Web checking, AVG Internet Security 8.0 offers a considerable performance improvement thanks to being rewritten for multi-core processors and combining its two separate virus and spyware databases into a single database. It also sports a whole new UI and offers scanning of any file transfers over the HTTP protocol, since that’s how most infections come into a computer.

Between the link checker and HTTP scanning, AVG believes “we’ve done all the things we need to do for today’s threats,” said Bridwell.

AVG Internet Security 8.0 also adds protection to Internet Explorer and Firefox browsers against so-called drive-by downloads, protects file exchanges over MSN and ICQ instant messengers, comes with a new firewall and a new anti-rootkit shield.

AVG Internet Security 8.0 is available for download starting February 28, at a cost of $54.99 for a one-year license and $79.99 for a two-year license.