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it@cork to bring top tech gurus to Cork for conference

Evening Echo
April 20, 2012



Source: Evening Echo



Big Fish Games at the it@cork

Evening Echo
April 4, 2012



Source: Evening Echo



IT Wizards Network on Tech Tuesday

Evening Echo
March 12, 2012



Source: Evening Echo



Cybercrime is a massive industry

Irish Independent
February 23, 2012



Source: Irish Independent



Smarttech Sponsors www.speakupformarymount.ie

The Bishopstown News
November 2011



Source: The Bishopstown News



SMART CONSUMER: Protect your smartphone

Irish Independent
June 09, 2011



Source: Irish Independent



Businesses must do more with less to survive

The Sunday Business Post
March 20, 2011



Source: The Sunday Business Post



Smart moves to stay ahead in the business world

The Sunday Business Post
March 6, 2011



Source: The Sunday Business Post



Smarttech saves energy

The Sunday Business Post
November 21, 2010


In a deal worth €50,000, IT company Smarttech has been awarded exclusive distribution of an energy-saving software solution developed by Irish company, EnergyWatchIT. Ronan Murphy, chief executive of Smarttech, said the software could cut energy bills by 50 per cent or more and save €55 per PC per year.
‘‘The energy-saving software allows organisations to establish green energy saving policies and automate shut down and hibernation of the organisations’ PCs," said Murphy.
He said the software also facilitated energy saving comparisons over various time periods and between different departments and could be managed remotely from one server.
Smarttech employs 32 people at its offices in Dublin and Cork and has turnover of €1.5 million.

Source: The Sunday Business Post



Smart Consumer: How your smartphone is at risk of an app attack

By Tina Leonard / Irish Independent
Thursday November 18, 2010


If you've written your wish list for Santa, chances are a smartphone is on it. Whether it's an iPhone, Blackberry or Android's version, each is a desirable piece of kit. Emailing, web browsing, updating your Facebook page, downloading apps and a lot more; a smartphone is a computer and social networking tool in your pocket. And like your computer it holds a lot of your personal data, so how do you keep it safe?

Dermot Williams, MD of IT-security specialists Threatscape, explains your smartphone could contain confidential data and your credit-card details, so you have to worry about people getting their hands on it. Plus if you keep your social networking page open, anyone could update your status with something malicious. "You wouldn't leave your wallet unattended on a bar counter," says Williams, "so why would you leave your smartphone there when it's just as valuable?" Whatever about someone accessing your data, could your phone be open to a virus in the same way your computer is?

"Yes, the threat is real," says CEO of IT service providers Smarttech, Ronan Murphy. "Hackers are well-funded and smart and they will go where the masses go. Right now that's mobile phones, which is the fastest growing platform where people keep sensitive data." The first virus appeared in 2004 and was delivered to PDA devices over Bluetooth, says Murphy. "The virus drained the battery and it was done for fun more than anything, but now hackers are more sinister."

According to Murphy, the first Trojan virus for android phones appeared in August. A buyer registered for a media player but unknown to them, there was a Trojan virus installed that started sending premium rate texts. Their account paid up and the hackers collected the money. The same thing can happen when registering for a game or app so it is crucial to know who you are doing business with. 'Apple say you cannot get a virus on their phone," says Murphy, "but the problem is that many people who use iPhones 'jailbreak' so that they can access apps outside of the tightly controlled Apple store.

"Once you 'jailbreak' you are opening your iPhone up to potential viruses, and if you 'jailbreak' Apple will not recognise your phone any more. In September there were seven billion app downloads, so the scale for potential risk is huge."

According to a report in last week's Shanghai Daily a 'zombie' virus disguised as an anti-virus app infected more than one million smartphone users. Spamming the phones with money-making links has netted the hackers up to $300,000 a day in added text-message charges for the users affected. The bad news is that if the worst happens, your smartphone's operating system will need to be wiped and re-loaded. Williams says that the "security software for phones is not as sophisticated yet as that for computers as they don't need to be", but he adds "when it is needed the software will be there".

The good news is that if you operate a decent level of common sense, all should be fine.

- Tina Leonard
Source: Irish Independent
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