online backup & remote backup graphic

Remote Backup Software Powering Successful
Online Backup Services for More Than 22 Years
Brandable, Scalable, Full-Featured, Customizable, Complete Solution

 
Your Own Online
Backup Service
in Just 5 Minutes
for Only $49!

  • Branded Website with
  • Mercury for PC & Mac
  • Free Trial Accounts
  • Free Tech Support


  • (800) 519-7643
    (901) 405-1234
    9-5 Central Time



    We just broke the 1,000 PC barrier! Just about all are small businesses. At some times during the night, we have over 100 small businesses doing backups at the same time. Pretty amazing...they just roll on/off the monitor. - M.R. Laurel, MD

    Join Our Email List
    EMail:  
    For Email Marketing you can trust

    Online Backup Articles
    Backup Software Articles




    Click to verify BBB accreditation and to see a BBB report.

    SQL Server Backup

    SQL Server Backup

    As the venerable SQL database product continues to be bundled with various releases from Microsoft, more businesses are making use of the database tool. With the rise in numbers of SQL implementations comes a need for a solid SQL Server Backup software product. Often powering applications that are critical to a businesses continued profitability, these SQL apps will continue as a prominent component in business computing in the years to come.

    SQL Server is a relational database management system (RDBMS) from Microsoft that's designed for the enterprise environment. SQL Server runs on T-SQL (Transact -SQL), a set of programming extensions from Sybase and Microsoft that add several features to standard SQL, including transaction control, exception and error handling, row processing, and declared variables.

    Last year Microsoft finally released SQL Server 2005, helping to put the software giant in direct competition with Oracle and IBM whose databases have traditionally handled bigger, more complex demands. Although the new DBMS offers a slew of enhancements that would raise the eyebrows of even the hardest-to-please DBAs and developers -- from 64-bit processing to a common language runtime environment -- it has not yet been fully received by the market. Instead, third-party vendors continue to help SQL Server pros work more efficiently in SQL Server 2000 environments, offering everything from improved backup and recovery and data encryption measures to high-resolution reporting and keystroke tricks.

    If your task includes configuring SQL Server Backup, consider the RBackup Remote Backup product. With bit-level backup as a standard option, RBackup can back up even the largest SQL databases and SQL-dependent projects. At RBS, we have assisted companies with data and database backups since the inception of these programs. No other company in the world has more experience with SQL server remote backup configurations.

     

     

     

     

     

    E-Cyclopedia Home
    Remote Backup Home
    Volume 2 Index

    Backup and Restore
    Backup Online
    Backup Program
    Backup Tape Drive
    Backup Utility
    CD Backup
    CD Backup Software
    CD RW Backup
    CDR Backup
    Computer Backup
    Computer Backup Software
    Computer System Backup
    Copy Hard Drive
    Data Backup And Recovery
    Data Backup Services


    Data Backup Software
    Data Backup Solution
    Data Backup Storage
    Disk Backup
    Disk Cloning
    Disk Duplication
    Disk Recovery
    Hard Disk Cloning

    Data Backup System
    Data Disaster Recovery
    Data Protection
    DVD Backup
    DVD Backup Software
    Exchange Server Backup
    File Backup

    Data Recovery Experts
    Data Recovery Software
    Data Transfer
    Data Vaulting
    Hard Disk Data Recovery Software
    Hard Disk Drive Recovery
    Hard Drive Cloning
    Hard Drive Copy

    Internet Security News
    Breaking news and updates in Internet security
    Last Updated: March 9th, 2010 14:24:22 CST -0600

    ICSA Labs Finds Flaws In New Security Products
    It's sometimes fun to be an early adopter, as the long lines and waitlists for things like iPhones and the new Camaro have proven. But where security products are concerned, do yourself a favor and let other folks go first, since a fresh report indicates that it can take more than a single try to get things right.

    ICSA Labs Finds Flaws In New Security Products
    ICSA Labs Finds Flaws In New Security Products

    ICSA Labs, which is based in Pennsylvania and has been around for 20 years, tests and sometimes certifies products. Emphasis on "sometimes."

    An ICSA Labs Product Assurance Report indicated that just 4 percent of security products attain certification following a first round of testing. Most have to try again between one and three times before making the cut.

    And it's not guaranteed that a product will ever meet the necessary standards, either. According to ICSA Labs, only about 82 percent of products attain certification in the end, meaning about one-fifth of all applicants (and perhaps a much larger percentage of products) aren't up to snuff.

    So leave the shakedown cruises to less cautious individuals. Just repeat "patience is a virtue" a few times and read reviews while you're waiting, and remember that things will be less likely to blow up in your face when you finally get onboard.

    Nigeria Announces Early Results Of Anti-Scammer Initiative
    No one's sure how many there are to go, but according to a Nigerian official, there are about 800 scam email addresses and 18 criminals that can be considered "down." Mrs. Farida Waziri, the chairperson of a government agency, announced that some shutdowns and arrests occurred thanks to an initiative called Project Eagle Claw.

    Nigeria Announces Early Results Of Anti-Scammer Initiative
    Nigeria Announces Early Results Of Anti-Scammer Initiative

    Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission is the force behind Project Eagle Claw, and with Microsoft's help, has just started ramping it up. Waziri explained in a statement, "We expect that Eagle Claw as conceived will be 100% operational within six months and at full capacity, it will take Nigeria out of the top 10 list of countries with the highest incidence of fraudulent e-mails."

    She then gave some very interesting details, continuing, "[U]pon full deployment, the capacity to take down fraudulent e-mails will increase to 5,000 monthly. Further it is projected that advisory mails to be sent to victims and potential victims will be about 230,000 monthly."

    Anything Nigeria can do to address the problem of scammers operating from within its borders will of course be good for the country's image. More than that, it might help honest Nigerians become part of the online world (since some entities have just taken to blocking troubled regions as a whole).

    Then there will be the benefit to the rest of the world, with maybe millions of dollars not getting lost. For that reason, Project Eagle Claw is likely to gain a lot of fans.

    MessageLabs Names Most- (And Least-) Spammed States
    When considering where to live, it's wise to look up stats about an area's climate, the cost of living, and its proximity to other important stuff in your life. Symantec's MessageLabs recently supplied some information about your odds of getting spammed, too.

    MessageLabs Names Most- (And Least-) Spammed States
    MessageLabs Names Most- (And Least-) Spammed States

    Somewhat surprisingly, the states you might imagine as being the "most wired" - California, New York, Washington - weren't at the top of the list. Instead, the state in which spam represents the highest percentage of all emails received is Idaho, with 93.8 percent.

    In an email to SecurityProNews, a Symantec/MessageLabs representative then listed the other top states (in order) as Kentucky, New Jersey, Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Arizona, and Maryland.

    The U.S. territory of Puerto Rico wound up on the opposite end of the list, followed by Montana, Alaska, Kansas, South Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont, Rhode Island, Wisconsin, and Florida.

    We're not quite sure what to make of these findings; the states don't appear to be ordered according to Internet penetration rates, GDP per capita, overall population, physical size, or anything else. Still, if you're looking to move, now you have a better idea of how to decrease the odds of getting bombarded with spam at your new home.

    Enormous Malware Archive Creates Stir
    A Dutch company known as the Frame4 Group has created what's almost the computing equivalent of a Center for Disease Control lab. The Malware Distribution Project is, according to its own site, the "world's biggest private malware archive."

    Enormous Malware Archive Creates Stir
    Enormous Malware Archive Creates Stir
    Don't jump to the conclusion that the project's run by a bunch of supervillains; the malware samples are supposed to be "offered for the purposes of analysis, testing and malware research."

    Also, customers are screened, and a monthly access fee of about $1,235 should act to keep out some of the riffraff.

    It actually seems possible that the Malware Distribution Project could be of great help to the security community. When you consider that medical researchers don't have to wander from house to house, asking people if they have cancer, every time they want to start a new experiment, certain practices start to seem a little outdated.

    There is a potential for problems, though. One nightmare scenario relates to the Malware Distribution Project's figurative walls failing and everything getting out. Having all of that malware run amuck at once - particularly if security researchers' computers were the first things it'd come across - would be bad.

    Then there's the possibility that some unpleasant person would gain access to the Malware Distribution Project's archive and just sort of go on a shopping spree. This way, some relatively stupid hacker might be able to get his (or her) hands on the most sophisticated viruses in existence.

    As you might imagine, the Malware Distribution Project is definitely proving divisive.

    Anyway, at last count, the repository contained a whopping 3,336,503 files.

    UPDATE (10-13-09): Anthony Aykut, the Managing Director of Frame4 Security Services, got in touch with SecurityProNews this morning to pass along some information. In an email, he wrote, "[T]he malware is neither downloadable via the web site or accessible in any other way via the www; in fact, the (secure) servers where the malware is stored (or analyzed/processed) is not even connected to the outside world."

    Aykut also stressed that nothing is sold to the public, and added, "Largely due to the security measure(s) mentioned above, and also based on to the fact that the storage media are protected by biometric devices, getting access to the MD:Pro archive is, well, pretty impossible."

    Avsim Hacker (Maybe) Brought Before Cops
    Perhaps people who like to spend their spare time in the cockpits of imaginary F-16s should be left alone. The man in charge of a flight simulator site that was attacked claims to have identified the hacker and forwarded information to the authorities.

    Avsim Hacker (Maybe) Brought Before Cops
    Avsim Hacker (Maybe) Brought Before Cops
    Avsim is one of the best-known flight sim communities in existence. It's been around for a long time, too. Unfortunately, a hacker managed to wipe about a decade's worth of modification info and forum posts from the site's servers back in May.

    Now, though, Tom Allensworth, the publisher and CEO of Avsim, has told the BBC, "We . . . have incontrovertible evidence of the individual that performed the hack. We have protected the forensic evidence and provided that evidence to the London police. We are committed to bringing justice to bear on this case."

    Allensworth is confident in the outcome, too, adding, "We fully expect that the criminal complaint . . . will result in the perpetrator spending some time behind bars - under UK law." (Since Avsim's located in the US, this means he's not pushing for extradition or anything of that sort.)

    Neither London's Metropolitan Police Service nor the accused individual (who hasn't been publicly named) has made any comment yet.

    Email Password Hackers Present Real Threat
    The next time you have something really important to tell someone, consider whether a drive over to his or her house wouldn't be a nice way of spending a few minutes. One reporter has found that it's quite easy (and perhaps all too common) for people to buy email accounts' passwords from hackers.

    Email Password Hackers Present Real Threat
    Email Password Hackers Present Real Threat
    Tom Jackman wrote in an article for the Washington Post, "[S]ervices as YourHackerz.com are still active and plentiful, with clever names like 'piratecrackers.com' and 'hackmail.net.' They boast of having little trouble hacking into such Web-based e-mail systems as AOL, Yahoo, Gmail, Facebook and Hotmail, and they advertise openly."

    Jackman found that prices for passwords range from around $30 to $100, which means that even the average ten-year-old can probably afford these hackers' services.

    Plus, unless someone important is involved or things get rather serious, law enforcement isn't terribly likely to look into (or at least resolve) the matter, because accessing a computer without authorization is just a misdemeanor in most areas and tracking down a perpetrator can be difficult.

    And it doesn't help, of course, that all of these facts have now been publicized in a widely-read newspaper.

    So if you've got some nasty business rivals or psycho exes, at least try to play it safe by changing your password often for as long as you're in the person's sights. Then there's always the option of putting a few more miles on the odometer, too.

    Laptops, CDs Alarm Governors, Credit Unions
    Today's lesson - that stuff in the physical world can pose a security threat - is a simple one. It seems to be an important one, too, as governors and credit unions are receiving unsolicited and suspicious laptops and CDs.

    Laptops, CDs Alarm Governors, Credit Unions
    Laptops, CDs Alarm Governors, Credit Unions

    The laptops may represent the more interesting development. Robert McMillan reports, "The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation is trying to figure out who is sending laptop computers to state governors across the U.S., including West Virginia Governor Joe Mahchin and Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal. . . . According to sources familiar with the investigation, other states have been targeted too . . ."

    New HP laptops are apparently just showing up, unsought but ready for use, at government offices. That's fine if some Bill Gates-like figure has decided to give small gifts to our country's political leaders, of course. It's less fine if someone's trying to steal all of their passwords and whatever sort of public and private info they'd use the laptops to view.

    As for the CDs, the problem appears to be smaller. Indeed, the discs probably just exposed some lapses in judgment. Malware infected CDs that were sent to credit unions were "part of an authorized pen[etration] test," according to Johannes Ulrich, who spoke with a Microsolved representative.

    It doesn't look like any damage has been done, then. Just try to keep in mind the old warnings about knowing where stuff's been and gifts being too good to be true.

    McAfee Warns Consumers Of Fake Antivirus Software
    McAfee issued a warning today to consumers about "scareware," or fake antivirus software calling it possibly the most costly online scam in 2010, causing significant monetary loss and damage to users' computers.

    McAfee Warns Consumers Of Fake Antivirus Software
    McAfee Warns Consumers Of Fake Antivirus Software

    Scareware is the first scam outlined in McAfee's new Consumer Threat Alert program that warns people about the latest and most dangerous online threats.

    "Even the savviest of computer users fall victim to online threats because cybercriminals have become so sophisticated," said Jeff Green, senior vice president of McAfee Labs.

    "The Consumer Threat Alerts are a warning sound to keep consumers from falling victim to online dangers. We're on the front lines watching and protecting against threats, and we pass that knowledge onto consumers."

    Scareware is one of the most widespread, dangerous and sophisticated online scams, victimizing an estimated one million people around the globe everyday. McAfee says cybercriminals make profits of $300 million worldwide from scamming consumers with scareware.

    Fake antivirus software pops onto a users' screen and alerts the users their computer may be vulnerable. To disguise the scam, cybercriminals create legitimate looking logos of fake security companies.

    The pop-up prompts the user to scan the computer for vulnerabilities, which they don't realize is fake, or even buy the "security software" which is actually malware in disguise. Cybercriminals get victims to input their credit card information, giving criminals' access to the user's computer and bank details.

    "It's an incredibly lucrative business for cybercriminals," said Francois Paget from McAfee Labs, a security research expert.

    "In fact, one company known as 'Innovative Marketing' made an estimated $180 million through these scams in one year, and more than four million consumers purchased their fake security software thinking it was real."

    FBI Director Warns Of Cyber Threats
    FBI Director Robert Mueller spoke about cyber threats along with how the U.S. is working with partners around the world to tackle them, during a keynote address at the annual RSA computer security conference in San Francisco on Thursday.

    The Director said U.S. intelligence indicates the threat of cyber terror is "real and rapidly expanding," including the rise of extremist websites to recruit, radicalize, and incite violence.

    Terrorists have yet to launch a full-scale cyber strike, but have "executed numerous denial-of-service attacks" and even defaced the website of the U.S. Congress following President Obama's recent State of the Union address. The Director told the crowd of cyber professionals that al Qaeda and other extremists "have shown a clear interest in pursuing hacking skills."

    According to the Director, the FBI's cyber capabilities and partnerships include:

    *Cyber squads in each field office nationwide, with over 1,000 specially trained agents, analysts, and digital forensic examiners who run complex undercover operations, share intelligence with law enforcement and intelligence partners, and provide training to counterparts around the world;

    *More than 60 overseas offices-called legal attachs-that share information and coordinate joint investigations with their host countries;

    *Agents embedded with police forces in Romania, Estonia, the Netherlands, and other countries; and

    *Mobile Cyber Action Teams-highly-trained groups of agents, analysts, and experts in both computer forensics and malicious code who travel the world to respond to fast-moving cyber threats.

    The Director stressed the relationship with the private sector is vital in reporting breaches of cyber security. "No one country, company, or agency can stop cyber crime," he said.

    "A 'bar the windows and bolt the doors' mentality will not ensure our collective safety. We must start at the source; we must find those responsible."

    Jail Sentences Not Certain For Mariposa Botnet Authors
    Although the three men believed to be behind the Mariposa botnet were recently identified and arrested by Spanish authorities, it looks like they may avoid serving any jail time for their online trespasses. Spain's cybercrime laws are quite weak at the moment.

    Jail Sentences Not Certain For Mariposa Botnet Authors
    Jail Sentences Not Certain For Mariposa Botnet Authors

    According to Brian Krebs, Captain Cesar Lorenzana, who works for the Spanish Civil Guard, explained that prison sentences typically aren't associated with deeds committed from behind a keyboard. Plus, some things simply aren't against the law.

    "In Spain, it is not a crime to own and operate a botnet or distribute malware," he said. "So even if we manage to prove they are using a botnet, we will need to prove they also were stealing identities and other things, and that is where our lines of investigation are focusing right now."

    Furthermore, Krebs wrote, "[T]he men are all free on their own recognizance. . . . [T]hey are free to hoover up as much stolen data as they please, as the Mariposa working group has not yet been able to shutter the Web sites that served as the repository for personal and financial data stolen from people whose systems were ensnared by the bot."

    The good news is that Spain is trying to modernize its laws, so even if the Mariposa's authors get off this time, they (and/or other cybercriminals) shouldn't be in the clear forever.



    Home | Products | Order | Demos | Site Map | About Us | Refer a Friend | Privacy

    Copyright © 1987-2010 Online Holdings, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.