Tuesday September 30, 2008 | ${log.root}/lowem.log Inflation, Investing and Everything |
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One of my domains just got hacked. It must have happened sometime in the past 24 hours because I check on all my domains multiple times per day, and it was just picked up by the corporate firewall. According to this site : A lot of popular scripts developed for PHP 4 are currently being hacked through a tmp directory exploit ... it manifest's itself in an appended line in index.php (pls check also administrator/index.php), which through an iframe makes an ulr query (GET) to a count. php file. External website varies (depends on infected slaves/hosts) bit can be picnoc.org, picnoc.info or wsxhost.net. The code line (appended last in above mentioned files) resembles "<iframe src="http://pinoc.org/count.php?o=2" </iframe> - It's safe to say that all the .html and .php files are infected (I did a check). As of now, sub-domains are still safe for the moment, they are only infecting the main URL (www.[domain].com, etc). Seems that there are a lot of PHP hacks going on these days. Just a week ago or so, a popular parenting forum of which I am helping out with also got registration-spammed, even through the CAPTCHA - they were using the default PHPBB CAPTCHA though so I'd suppose that has gotten broken and leaks like a sieve by now. Owners of PHP-based sites beware! (2008-09-30 18:18:56 SGT)
[Tech]
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This article belongs to the Singapore inflation watch story arc. channelnewsasia.com, spervices.sg (pdf): Singaporeans will see an increase of 21% in their electricity bills in the last quarter of this year. For the quarter 1 Oct to 31 Dec 08, the average electricity tariffs will be increased by 5.38 cents per kWh. This represents an increase of 21.46% for households. The increase is due to higher fuel oil prices. For the period 1 Oct to 31 Dec 08, tariffs are pegged to a higher forward fuel oil price of S$155.14 per barrel, which is 38.06% higher than that of S$112.35 per barrel for the current quarter [Q3 2008]. The EMA feels there is more room for Singaporeans to conserve and use less energy. The EMA's surveys and findings show that nearly 40% of Singapore homes are using more energy than they require to. And the air conditioner is one of the largest energy guzzlers in homes here. - For residential households in Singapore, the electricity rate will increase from 25.07 to 30.45 cents per kilowatt-hour. Quarter-on-quarter that's a 21.46% increase as stated, but if you were to look back a bit further, it's a mind-blowing 89.6% increase compared to 3 years ago, as the tariffs back in Apr 2005 was 16.06 cents per KWh. This is a super-high double-digit rate of inflation, and all we need is for another further one or two rounds of increase to hit a triple-digit rate within a 3-year period. Absolutely super. The surprise here is that while NYMEX crude oil prices have been driven downward in recent weeks by the ongoing financial market meltdown, the oil price used for electricity rate calculations isn't the historical NYMEX crude oil movements but forward fuel prices for the upcoming quarter, which are, after conversion to USD, around $110 per barrel. As for conservation measures, they will help somewhat but only up to a point. If the rates were to double, could you cut back to use half the electricity? If they were to triple? Quadruple? Would you be able to cut back 66%? 75%? The price upside is effectively unlimited, while your downside mitigation measures will naturally start to run into limits. But of course that isn't to say that we shouldn't try. In view of our own pocketbook, resource depletion and environment pollution, we should still strive towards energy conservation as much as we can. As I have chronicled earlier, we have reduced our household power consumption from a whopping 700 KWh per month down to a much more manageable 436 KWh (average over past 3 months). That's a reduction of 37.7% - not too bad, eh? Here are some of the things we did in terms of energy conservation over the past couple years or so : - configured the computers to auto-shutdown after the nightly backups That seems like a long list of things to do and some of them cost money too. Of course all the LCD's cost money, but we had actually been hanging on to CRT's long after everyone and their grandmother had already upgraded, so there you are. Further improvements would be more incremental tweaks - perhaps I may permanently turn off the second cordless phone which is only occasionally used, replace the very last 19" CRT TV in one of the bedrooms, also occasionally used, sending the children's bathtub to the recycling bin to save on some heated water since they are too big for it anyway, things like that. We'll see how this goes. See also : 1. Singapore : electricity tariffs to increase April 2008 on rising oil prices (2008-09-30 17:05:34 SGT)
[Energy]
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This article belongs to the Singapore inflation watch story arc. Most bus and train journeys will see fare changes from 1 October 2008. The Public Transport Council (PTC) has given the green light for an overall net fare adjustment that will result in fare changes that will range from a 7-cent reduction to a 4-cent increase per journey. This will be offset by an increase in transfer rebate from 25 cents to 40 cents. Chairman of the PTC, Gerard Ee said "by raising the transfer rebate this year and making the operators absorb a larger part of the cost, we managed to strike a balance and keep the overall net fare adjustment to just 0.7%, much lower than the fare cap of 3%. This decision comes after careful deliberation, testing many permutations and scrutinising the impact on both operators and commuters." - So you see how something that should be relatively simple such as bus and MRT train fare pricing, can be made really complicated, with transfer rebates, concession fares, distance-related fare stages, and so on. They might as well throw in a timing factor and make the price vary by the time of day. No matter what it is, the overall general direction is up, and at the end of the day that's all that the people would care about. See also : 1. Public Transport Council approves 1.7% fare increase for bus, trains (2008-09-30 11:00:16 SGT)
[Energy]
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