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Travel Tips Cambodia - Thailand - Japan - INTERNET THEFT - November 2006
Thursday November 30, 2006 Roman Wanderaugh - National Radio Text Service In THAILAND December 5 is the birthday of his Majesty the King Bhumibol Adulyadej - THAILAND'S MARTIAL LAW PARTIALLY LIFTED - The Angkor-Gyeongju World Cultural Expo - Freshie Boy & Girl contest in Phnom Penh - Dr. Beat In Siem Reap - TA TA YOUNG concert in Bangkok - FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2006 from December 10 to 17 - Beware of Budget Airline ticket prices
December 5 Is the Birthday of Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej December and January are big months for things to do for a foreigner traveling in Asia particularly in the areas of sports and entertainment. Thailand will be celebrating the birthday of his Majesty the King Bhumibol Adulyadej on December 5th as well as honoring his 60th year on the throne. He is the longest standing reigning monarch alive. DID YOU KNOW??? Thailand's king is a musician and wrote the Thai national anthem. He has had several of his compositions recorded by the Count Bassie Band. The saxophone is his instrument. He was born in the USA in 1927. His father Prince Mahidol was studying medicine at Harvard University. The king speaks five languages English, French, German and Thai. THAILAND'S MARTIAL LAW PARTIALLY LIFTED Thailand has lifted MARTIAL LAW in 48 of their 76 provinces including Bangkok. Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai, two of the most visited cities by foreigners remain under martial law. They are the departure points for trekking in that region. Provinces that remain under martial law are primarily located in the north and northeast of the country. In the south several provinces remain under martial law including Ranong and those that border Malaysia. This is due to the civil conflict in the Malaysian border areas that has led to numerous deaths. ANGKOR WAT - SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA The Angkor-Gyeongju World Cultural Expo a collaboration between the Cambodian and South Korean governments is taking place next to the Angkor Archaeological Park in Siem Reap, Cambodia through January 9. The Expo features daily shows with performers from Cambodia, South Korea and 16 countries including India, Poland, Latvia, and Uzbekistan. Food, native products and games are also on the menu. Tickets are $20 for foreigners and $3 for Cambodians.
ENTERTAINMENT The new emerging culture of Cambodia is represented by the Freshie Boy & Girl contest that will begin Saturday December 2 with a live telecast from Phnom Penh on Cambodia's TV 3. Of the 20 boys and 20 girls involved that show will feature the selection of the 10 boy and 10 girl winners that will proceed to the next round of the contest. The remaining elimination rounds of the contest will take place starting 6:30pm on Fridays December 8, 15, 22 and 29 at the hall of the Parkway Shopping Center on Mao Tse Toung Boulevard in Phnom Penh. Entrance is free and open to the public.Those one hour shows will be televised on a delay basis the following day on TV 3 at 6:30pm Saturdays December 9, 16, 23 and 30 DR BEAT IN SIEM REAP Dr. Beat Richner is most notably known for two things... building children's hospitals in Cambodia and playing the cello. Dr. Beat performs in Siem Reap in the auditorium of Jayvarman Hospital Saturday nights at 7:15pm TA TA YOUNG IN CONCERT According to FHM she is one of the 100 Sexiest Women in the world in their 2006 (Thai Edition). The 2006 FHM Thai Edition also noted that she is the Sexiest Singer in Thailand (as noted on her web site)... The she they are talking about is Thai singer Ta Ta Young who is half Thai and half American. Young is currently involved in her Temperature Rising show and will perform in Bangkok December 15 at the Impact Arena, Muang Thong Thani. Ticket prices range from 600 baht to 2,500 (US $16 to $70) DID I HEAR A WOW!!! Coming: Inside Ta Ta Young on Video Beat…… FIFA CLUB WORD CUP The FIFA Club World Cup 2006 will be held in Japan from December 10 to 17. AIRLINE TICKET PRICES Traveling in the region is getting better due to the emergence of budget airlines in recent years. But BEWARE…. In the past Air Asia is adverted ticket prices for as low as $5 for trips from Phnom Penh to Bangkok. The problem is how many seats are available at that price? A Cambodian daily newspaper reported this problem as we did several months ago. The result is you probably won't get a ticket at the advertised price. The other problem is read the small or fine print and note that there are a number of things that increase the cost of the ticket such as a fuel surcharge, other fees and airport tax. Other problems on several airlines that service Thailand are flights are often canceled due to low-ticket sales. Be prepared. KNOWLEDGE BRINGS DESTRUCTION When American Bill Herod brought the Internet to Cambodia in 1997 he though not intentionally, turned on the Cambodian economy with the ability to do commerce more capably. Herod then went on to teach Cambodian youth how to technically work the Internet. He started KIDS that was an IT training school for many of the Internet savvy youth in the country today. Full circle came when one of Herod's former students repaid him for the knowledge by opening up his own Internet shop. He also stole Herod's Internet password. He then proceeded to run up Herod's bill. Herod took the former student to court and won the case. Herod is now out of the Internet business. Some students use their IT knowledge in a positive way by opening Internet cafes or working in a company's IT department. But now there is a more pressing problem when the knowledge is used in a negative way causing some a loss of time money and equipment. This past year the BBU virus created by two Build Bright University college students is creating havoc and DAMAGE. BBU stands for the initials of the school. The virus is known take up space, slow down speed, damage USB flash drives and destroy files. In our travels to the Internet shops in Phnom Penh we asked the owners and staff if they were familiar with the problem. They all said yes. "They go to my school," (Build Bright University)," said one shop owner. No punishment has been dealt to the creators of this problem. The Cambodia Daily reported that a BBU administrator confronted the boys who admitted to infecting the university's computers. They also admitted that they had a stronger version that they had yet to release. One boy gave his thumbprint and promised not to release another version. That was then…. BUT... this is now. Since that time two more versions of the BBU have been released. In late August the University of Cambodia's Internet system became very slow and wouldn't function properly. A job that is usually completed in 10 minutes took over an hour without completing the task. Pictures wouldn't upload. Erasures of files also occurred. When we questioned Pom Piseth the head of the schools website development he admitted the problem was there and noted that the virus creators were also students at U Cam night school. He then showed us pictures of the violators who brazenly included their telephone numbers and email address in the message. Piseth noted that the virus was in all of their computers since it was inserted into a computer. Once inserted it then goes to the server that then infects all computers. At that time he had no cure for the problem. In August Internet shop operators were dealing with version 3 of the virus. They had a cure for version 1 but not for version 2 & 3. When we asked a shop owner if Symantec had been informed his reply was Symantec didn't consider it a real virus and didn't attempt to find a remedy. This week operators said they now have a cure for BBU version 2 & 3. The reality is that the perpetrators have yet to be called into account nor punished for the problems they have caused in lost business time, revenue and ruined equipment. The question is what does a thumbprint really mean to people that according to the Cambodia Daily want to be recognized as being the top computer hackers in the world? In Cambodia they may teach Internet technology but apparently they don't teach ethics and integrity. Continued: LOOK OUT FOR - Problems & attitudes from Internet shop owners. Related story PHISHING PREVIOUS story BEWARE - COMPUTER VIRUS SPREADING IN CAMBODIA A Build Bright University college student in Phnom Penh, Cambodia is responsible for Cambodia's first homegrown computer virus said a report in the Cambodia Daily. It is spreading throughout the country. Most importantly there is no cure. The virus shut down the university's system and the countries largest TV station CTN had their programs destroyed. The proud student named the virus after the university thus the name BBU from the initials of the school. The school rector asked the student to thumbprint an agreement that the student would not to release the virus into the public domain. The student admitted that he created another virus that is more dangerous that he has yet to release. His plan is to study all he can about computers so he can become a topflight computer hacker. He feels that creating viruses is fantastic. GO FIGURE BUT BEWARE…. Cambodia news information is available at: www.cambodiadaily.com COMPUTER THEFT When using a public computer at an Internet shop BEWARE. We've noticed an increased amount of Spam and odd computer behaviors. When we checked Internet options virtually every computer was set to save passwords and forms. We found one of ours. Some Internet shops also have hidden files hidden files where downloaded pictures are stored. They also save anything scanned or downloaded Acrobat Reader documents. Many have back rooms. Spy ware is abundant. After using a computer for a while and strange icons appeared and the service was not functioning properly we saw a message stating someone was on line. All of our icons were changed. In the hidden icons there was INSTANT MESSAGING TURNED ON. When the shop owners or managers are questioned about why the answer is OHH… MY CUSTOMERS CAN'T REMEMBER or they didn't know about it because customers put information into the machines. When you bring up the point that information can be written down and if someone wants to save something they can put it on their flash drive or a floppy disk. It's amazing how the shop owner didn't think of that. When it was pointed out that it is their business and their responsibility to take care of their computers they seem not to understand…. Intentionally or not. Internet shop staffs spend a lot of time listening to music or looking at or downloading pornography. When you point out to the shop owner that viruses and spy ware can be hidden in those types of files they know but permit it. When it is pointed out that they pay the employees to do a job and is that job to look at sex site and listen to music? They seem stunned. The point of taking responsibility and having integrity for the safety of the public's documents such as financials and passwords relating to the business seems to be all news to them. INTERNET THEFT WARRANTS CAUTION TIP… Internet theft is rampant in the region. The work you are doing at many of the Internet cafes can be accessed from within or outside the shop from another computer. Also many of the shops have the computers set to remember passwords and save forms and downloads. In some shops we have found that legal documents that were scanned were saved in files that remain in the system for a week or more. Use the Fire Fox browser whenever possible. After receiving too many requests from business to change passwords we decided to look at how the computers are set at Internet shops. In doing so we found that there was too much to think about and self-protection was in order. When using an Internet shop computer it is wise to go TOOLS on the computers tool bar and click on INTERNET OPTIONS. From there in general information click on open to BLANK PAGE. Delete links to other sites as well as the history. Go to PRIVACY and set remember history to 0 days. Also delete remember history, clear the cache, save NO passwords. Make sure the computer will not SAVE OR REMEMBER PASSWORDS or COPY FORMS. Close and then click REFRESH THREE TIMES then open the browser. Check history. If there is a history something is wrong. Repeat the process or change computers. After you finish your work repeat the process to make sure the person that uses the computer after you can't track your information and go to the sites you've visited. Also some employees have been seen going to a computer after a customer has left the shop and clicked on and went to every website the customer visited. We have pointed out to some shops the copying of passwords and forms in their computers in Internet Options. Some were very squeamish and others were attentive and tried to correct the problem. In some cases customers input the spy devices. Some shops have set their computers so that what they have set can't be changed. You then have the option to leave and go to another shop where you can repeat the process and have a clean computer to use. Some shops have a system that whatever they scan will be saved to a file. This may not solve all of the problems but it's a start. More suggestions are welcomed. © Copyright: National Radio. Any use of these materials, whole or in part, is prohibited unless authorized in writing by National Radio. Contact: nationalradio@yahoo.com All rights reserved
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