TidBITS#1123/23-Apr-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1123>


  Security continues to weigh heavily on our minds, as Mark Anbinder
  encourages Java and Word updates to protect against the SabPub
  malware, and Glenn Fleishman explains how to report text message spam
  to AT&T. Glenn also reviews DropKey 1.0, a new utility for Mac OS X
  10.7 Lion that simplifies exchanging encrypted files. In other news,
  Jeff Carlson notes Adobe’s just-announced Creative Suite 6 and the new
  Creative Cloud, a subscription service for using Adobe applications.
  And Instagram may be happy about being acquired by Facebook for $1
  billion, but not all Instagram users are as excited, so Agen Schmitz
  looks at how you can back up your Instagram photo portfolio, in case
  you decide to jump ship. Lastly, Adam Engst delves deeply into Android
  to share the best ways — Amazon doesn’t make it easy! — to download
  and read EPUB and PDF ebooks on a Kindle Fire. Notable software
  releases this week include Quicksilver ß67, LaunchBar 5.2, and
  Suitcase Fusion 4.

Articles
    SabPub Malware Infects Unpatched Word and Java Installations
    Adobe Announces Creative Suite 6 and Creative Cloud
    Report Text Message Spam to AT&T
    Back Up Your Instagram Photo Portfolio
    DropKey Makes Exchanging Encrypted Files a Snap
    How to Download EPUB, PDF, and Mobipocket to the Kindle Fire
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 23 April 2012
    ExtraBITS for 23 April 2012


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SabPub Malware Infects Unpatched Word and Java Installations
------------------------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12948>

  Although security-related updates sometimes introduce other 
  problems, it is becoming all the more important to install them 
  quickly regardless. In particular, Mac users who haven’t installed 
  Apple’s Java updates for Mac OS X 10.7 Lion and 10.6 Snow Leopard, 
  and users still using unpatched copies of Microsoft Word 2004 and 
  2008, are vulnerable to recent variants of malware. That’s the 
  warning from Mac security firm Intego, whose VirusBarrier malware 
  definitions dated 12 April 2012 or later can detect and remove these 
  variants.

<http://www.intego.com/virusbarrier>

  As we wrote in “How to Detect and Protect Against Updated 
  Flashback Malware” (5 April 2012) and “Apple Releases Flashback 
  Malware Removal Tools” (12 April 2012), Apple has released updates 
  to its Java software for Lion and Snow Leopard that eliminate the 
  Java vulnerabilities and remove the most common variants of 
  Flashback. If you haven’t already installed the appropriate Java 
  update for your Mac, do so immediately, or disable the Java plug-ins 
  in your Web browsers (instructions are in the first article linked 
  above). Disabling Java is the best solution for those using versions 
  of Mac OS X older than 10.6 Snow Leopard.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12918>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12934>

  Intego says the original SabPub malware exploited the same Java 
  vulnerability as Flashback and “seeks to connect to remote command 
  and control servers, presumably to harvest information on infected 
  Macs.” A newer version of SabPub takes advantage of a 
  vulnerability in older versions of Microsoft Word to infect Macs 
  with the malware.

<http://www.intego.com/mac-security-blog/sabpab-backdoor-exploits-java-vulnerability/>
<http://www.intego.com/mac-security-blog/new-sabpab-variant-uses-word-files-to-infect-macs/>

  The company says unpatched versions of Microsoft Word 2004 and Word 
  2008 are vulnerable, but Word 2011 is not. (Microsoft fixed the 
  vulnerability in 2009, and it’s telling that the bad guys think 
  it’s worth trying very old vulnerabilities to infect users who 
  haven’t kept their software up to date.) In addition, files in 
  Microsoft Word’s current .docx format are not vulnerable, just 
  those using the older .doc format. To be clear about what 
  “unpatched” means, users of Word 2004 and Word 2008 who have 
  installed the security update described in Microsoft’s Security 
  Bulletin MS09-009 are not vulnerable. If you’re not certain if you 
  have installed that update, run the Microsoft AutoUpdate 
  application, typically found in the Microsoft Office folder or the 
  Applications folder, and allow it to install any available security 
  updates. You may need to install multiple updates sequentially.

<http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/security/bulletin/MS09-009>

  And, as always, be careful about opening Word documents — or any 
  attachments, really — from unknown sources. The Quick Look feature 
  in Mac OS X (select the file and press the Space bar) is probably a 
  safer way to peek inside many common file types if you’re 
  uncertain as to what the file might contain. 


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Adobe Announces Creative Suite 6 and Creative Cloud
---------------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12951>

  After releasing some teasing public betas, notably one for Adobe 
  Photoshop CS6, Adobe has formally announced Creative Suite 6 (CS6), 
  a major update to its entire line of creative content applications. 
  However, the biggest news this time isn’t new versions of 
  Photoshop, InDesign, Illustrator, Dreamweaver, Premiere Pro, After 
  Effects, and the rest (14 applications in all). Adobe is also 
  announcing Creative Cloud, a subscription service that not only 
  provides cloud storage for CS projects, but also enables anyone to 
  use the applications for a monthly fee. (Adobe says CS6 and Creative 
  Cloud will be available within 30 days.)

<http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/photoshopcs6/>
<http://www.adobe.com/aboutadobe/pressroom/pressreleases/201204/042312AdobeCreativeSuite6.html>

  As with previous releases, the Creative Suite will appear in a 
  handful of bundles containing different mixes of the applications: 
  Design & Web Premium ($1899), Design Standard ($1299), Production 
  Premium ($1899), and Master Collection ($2599). Individual CS 
  applications can also be ordered separately, and upgrade pricing is 
  available, depending on which versions of the apps you currently 
  own.

  Formerly, that would be it. If you wanted the latest version, you 
  ponied up the cash to buy it. But Creative Cloud presents an 
  alternative. After you sign up for a subscription, you can download 
  any of the CS apps — and others, including Lightroom 4, Adobe 
  Muse, and Adobe Edge — and install them on your computer. The 
  applications check in every 30 days to make sure you have an active 
  subscription, so you don’t need a live Internet connection just to 
  launch an application.

  Creative Cloud costs $50 per month if you sign up for a full year 
  (so, $600), or $75 per month if you want to stick to a 
  month-to-month subscription. (Adobe is also offering introductory 
  pricing for the first year to registered customers of Creative Suite 
  3 or later for $29.99 per month; you need to enter your Adobe ID to 
  check for eligibility. Much more information is available at 
  Adobe’s Creative Cloud FAQ.)

<https://creativecloud-specialoffer.adobe.com/special-offer/?loc=en_US>
<http://www.adobe.com/products/creativecloud/faq.html>

  Creative Cloud initially looks like a good idea for freelancers or 
  contract employees to get access to the latest CS tools without 
  having to shell out for the full retail price of the software.

  In terms of what features are new in the suite, allow me to refer 
  you to our friends at Macworld and InDesign Secrets for in-depth 
  coverage.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/1166487/adobe_launches_creative_suite_6_alongside_new_creative_cloud_subscription_service.html>
<http://indesignsecrets.com/heres-what-we-love-about-indesign-cs6.php>


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Report Text Message Spam to AT&T
--------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12947>
  18 comments

  If you thought your iPhone was safe from the predations of spammers, 
  think again. Because U.S. carriers know that unhappy customers will 
  complain to state attorneys general, the FCC, and legislators about 
  receiving and being charged for unsolicited commercial (and often 
  totally fraudulent) cell phone calls and text messages, mobile 
  companies have policed such activity quite closely.

  But if you’re like me — and reports indicate you are — 
  you’ve started to receive more unwanted calls and messages in the 
  last year. Calls are the harder of the two to deal with: AT&T and 
  other carriers charge for a blocking service that’s quite 
  inconvenient to use. It’s not integrated into an iPhone’s call 
  system, for starters. AT&T’s is $4.99 per month, and lets you 
  block only 30 numbers. Hardly a solution, although it’s meant 
  mostly to control kids’ use of phones.

<http://www.att.net/smartcontrols-WirelessParentalControls>

  My uncle has a better solution. Create a “Sir Spam-a-Lot” entry 
  in Contacts, and add any spam callers as alternative numbers to that 
  entry. It’s surprising how often scammers re-use the same number. 
  Your phone rings, shows “Sir Spam-a-Lot” is calling, and you 
  just double-tap to send it to voicemail or ignore it. Even better, 
  take the advice of a commenter and set a silent or extremely 
  innocuous ringtone for the Sir Spam-a-Lot contact so spam calls and 
  texts don’t interrupt you.

  AT&T offers a way to report unwanted SMS/MMS messages, but I had to 
  ask on Twitter for the instructions, as the steps are not obvious to 
  those of us who don’t use SMS/MMS regularly. The free AT&T Mark 
  the Spot app for reporting bad cell coverage or calls also includes 
  a button for reporting SMS spam that explains, with too little 
  detail, how to do it. Perhaps a Report This Message button in the 
  Messages app would be abused. 

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-04/report-uce-text-messages.png>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/at-t-mark-the-spot/id338307313?mt=8>

  Here are the steps for AT&T. Although I only have an AT&T account, 
  my understanding is that other U.S. carriers use the same 7726 
  reporting number and have similar approaches.

  Note that AT&T waives all charges for reporting spam messages for 
  those on limited messaging plans, but the company does not 
  automatically credit you for the spam message itself. You can 
  request a credit from AT&T customer service, but it may not be worth 
  the effort for twenty cents. Of course, it’s not worth AT&T’s 
  effort either, so perhaps if lots of people request credits, 
  they’ll figure out how to provide automatic credits for reported 
  spam messages. It’s unreasonable for AT&T to benefit financially 
  from allowing customer accounts to be abused by spammers.

1. Bring up the text message in Messages and be sure not to click any 
   URLs embedded in the message.

2. Tap Edit.

3. Tap the empty circular (radio-style) button to the left of the 
   unwanted message. The Forward button activates.

4. Tap the Forward button.

5. Enter 7726 (the numeric equivalent of the letters SPAM on a 
   telephone keypad) and tap Send.

6. AT&T responds with a message asking you to send the number from 
   which the message originated.

7. You can write down the number of the spam and then tap it in, but 
   you can also use my uncle’s trick here too. Back at the spam 
   message, tap Add Contact > Create New Contact, and either make that 
   “Sir Spam-a-Lot” entry or tap Add to Existing Contact if you 
   already have one. (If this number is already in an entry, tap 
   Contact.)

8. Now tap the number that was added (or is already there in the Edit 
   screen), tap Select All, and tap Copy. 

9. Tap Done to close the Contact view.

10. Navigate back to the message you received from AT&T, tap in the 
   Text Message field, tap Paste, and tap Send.

11. You will receive a response from AT&T that they “appreciate your 
   assistance.”

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-04/report-uce-text-messages-2.png>

  Some of this reporting is purely in your self-interest, particularly 
  if you pay per text or have a grandfathered limited-message plan (I 
  still have my 2007 plan that includes 200 SMS/MMS messages per 
  month). By reporting, you can theoretically reduce future unwanted 
  use of your limited plan, as well as the annoyance factor of repeat 
  spamming. But you’re also helping the world at large. If enough 
  people constantly report text message spam, the crooks and abusers 
  will be shut off more quickly, and we will all receive less spam.


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Back Up Your Instagram Photo Portfolio
--------------------------------------
  by Agen G. N. Schmitz <agen@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12941>

  Instagram, the wildly successful photo sharing service that started 
  as an iOS-exclusive app, launched its first Android app on 3 April 
  2012, and garnered 5 million Android app downloads in its first six 
  days. But that news was a mere spark compared to the following 
  week’s bombshell announcement of Facebook’s intent to buy 
  Instagram for $1 billion, which briefly pushed the free iOS app to 
  the top of the charts in the App Store the following day.

<http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/story/2012-04-10/tnw-instagram-android-downloads/54145206/1>
<http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/top-of-the-charts-instagram-may-have-lost-a-few-ios-users-but-its-gained-a-whole-lot-more-new-ones/>

  However, much like when a beloved indie band signs with a major 
  label and subsequently alienates some of its core fan base, 
  Instagram found some of its loyal users turning against it. 
  Anticipating this, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg used his Facebook 
  post announcement of the deal to assuage Instagrammers that the 
  strengths of the service would remain:
      
      “We plan on keeping features like the ability to post to 
      other social networks, the ability to not share your 
      Instagrams on Facebook if you want, and the ability to have 
      followers and follow people separately from your friends on 
      Facebook.”

<http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/325716/20120409/instagram-backlash-facebook-purchase-android-release-anger.htm>
<https://www.facebook.com/zuck/posts/10100318398827991>

  Still, many Instagram users took to Twitter (using the #instablack 
  hashtag) to announce that they would be deleting the app, and not 
  just because their indie darling (with 30 million users) was going 
  corporate. It’s still unclear how Facebook will be using images 
  captured by the Instagram app, and that fact combined with 
  Facebook’s reputation for shifting privacy policies has fueled 
  much of the backlash.

<https://twitter.com/search/%23instablack>

  If you are considering deleting your Instagram account, the process 
  is actually fairly painless. However, be warned that deactivation 
  permanently removes all photos (as well as all comments and 
  friendship connections). So before you pull the trigger, you’ll 
  first want to make sure you have all the photos from your Instagram 
  portfolio safely tucked away somewhere locally.

<https://instagram.com/accounts/remove/request/>

  You may already have all of your Instagram photos in the Photos app 
  on your iPhone or iPad depending on your Instagram preferences 
  (found in Settings > Instagram), which can save either (or both) the 
  original snapped image or the filtered photo. However, if you want 
  to export a complete snapshot of your portfolio (or you haven’t 
  been saving images to the Photos app), several third-party options 
  can hook into your Instagram account to download the image files to 
  your computer’s hard drive. Surprisingly, Instagram doesn’t have 
  a Web interface that can access your photos.


**Instaport Internet Tool** -- Recommended by Instagram in its support 
  center, the free Instaport service (donation suggested) enables you 
  to download your entire Instagram history in a single Zip archive. 
  Additionally, it offers some advanced options that enable you to 
  filter photos based on recent history or date range. It can also 
  filter for specific hashtags, as well as other users’ photos that 
  you’ve “liked” (though Instaport notes that the like filter is 
  unstable).

<http://help.instagram.com/customer/portal/articles/95777-export-your-photos-to-your-computer>
<http://instaport.me/>

  After logging in to Instagram and allowing Instaport to access your 
  data, choose to download a Zip archive or click Advanced Options and 
  select your filtering method, then click the Start Export button. If 
  you have an extensive library, the export might take some time. When 
  it’s ready, a download link appears above your account name. If 
  you want to try exporting photos that you’ve liked from your 
  Instagram friends, you can repeat the process and start a new 
  export. In my test, I got 13 photos that I recently liked — far 
  fewer than the total that I’ve liked over my Instagram history.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-04/instaport-options.jpg>


**InstaBackup Mac App** -- David Smith’s free InstaBackup app does 
  one thing and one thing only — it backs up the entirety of your 
  Instagram photo library to your Mac’s hard drive. The only thing 
  you can configure is where the photos will land (by default, it 
  saves them to a folder on your Desktop). But it does the job simply 
  and effectively. 

<http://david-smith.org/blog/2012/04/09/instabackup-get-your-images-out-of-instagram/>

  InstaBackup is a good tool for all Instagrammers — whether 
  you’re leaving the fold or staying — as it’s an easy way to 
  create a local backup of your Instagram photos. The app compares the 
  photos that reside in your selected backup folder with what’s in 
  your Instagram library, and downloads only those photos that are 
  missing (i.e., most recent photos, but also any image files you may 
  have deleted from this directory — so make sure not to delete or 
  move any photos or they’ll download again).

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-04/instabackup-image.jpg>


**Via.me Social Network** -- One part Tumblr and one part Pinterest, 
  the recently launched Via.me social publishing platform is inviting 
  current Instagram users to port their photos into a Via.me profile. 
  You can choose to sign up for the Via.me service from its front page 
  using either your Facebook or Twitter login credentials, or you can 
  create a unique Via.me login on its Instagram import page. After 
  creating a Via.me account, sign into Instagram and authorize Via.me 
  to access your photos. When the porting is complete, you’ll find 
  your Instagram photos have automagically appeared in your Via.me 
  profile.

<https://www.tumblr.com/>
<http://pinterest.com/>
<http://via.me/>
<http://via.me/instagram>

  Note, however, that the Via.me iPhone app is frustratingly limited 
  to accounts that have been linked to either Facebook or Twitter. 
  Thus, if you create a Via.me account on the Instagram import page 
  and then don’t subsequently set up links to those services in 
  Via.me’s Account Settings page, you won’t have access to Via.me 
  through the iPhone app.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/viame/id474113683>


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DropKey Makes Exchanging Encrypted Files a Snap
-----------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12943>
  7 comments

  I know what you’re thinking: you need more encryption in your 
  life. Of course, you’re not really thinking that. No one but 
  security wonks like me and TidBITS Security Editor Rich Mogull has 
  any interest in the stuff that makes transactions and communications 
  safe from snoopers. Rather, you know you want _privacy and 
  security_, but you likely don’t care about the details.

  A new software product, DropKey 1.0 from WellRedApps, should 
  therefore merit your attention, at least if you’re running Mac OS 
  X 10.7 Lion, which it requires. It’s a dead simple way to exchange 
  encrypted files with other people without a lot of overhead or fuss 
  in making the exchange work securely. DropKey is also secure and 
  powerful enough that security wonks will like it, too. (Note: I 
  offered the developers free advice while beta testing DropKey, 
  especially about key verification, but received no compensation and 
  have no financial or other interest in the success of the 
  application.)

<http://www.wellredapps.com/products/dropkey/>


**DropKey and Public Key Crypto Basics** -- After you install and 
  launch DropKey, it appears as an icon in your menu bar. Click it, 
  and a dialog reveals a drag-and-drop area into which you can put 
  files and a space to enter recipients, who are matched from your 
  Address Book. Other controls include a share button (the iOS-like 
  arrow coming out of a box) for handing out your public key in 
  various ways, and a gear icon that provides access to preferences, a 
  key manager for viewing and verifying other people’s public keys, 
  online help, and the Quit command.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-04/dropkey_sending_files.jpg>

  DropKey uses public-key cryptography, which starts with a process 
  that creates both a public key that you can share and a private key 
  to which only you have access. DropKey stores your private key in 
  your system keychain, and you never need to manage this at all. When 
  someone wants to send you a file, they encrypt it with your public 
  key, and you decrypt it with your private key. Since only you have 
  your private key, no one else can snoop on the contents of the file. 
  Similarly, when you send someone a file, you encrypt it with their 
  public key, and they decrypt it with their private key.

  For other people to be able to send you encrypted files, they need 
  to have your public key. DropKey stores your public key as a custom 
  field in your personal contact record in Address Book, and it shares 
  your public key with recipients within a vCard (.vcf) file attached 
  to an email message created in Apple Mail. (vCard is the standard 
  for encoding contacts for export and import; it’s what you get 
  when you share a contact from Address Book on the Mac or Contacts in 
  iOS.) A recipient can import your vCard (via a menu or by dragging) 
  into Address Book, where either a new record is created, or the 
  program prompts to merge the imported vCard with an existing entry. 
  You likewise need the DropKey public keys from those to whom you 
  wish to send files. It’s a one-time hassle to exchange keys.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-04/dropkey-email.png>

  (A privacy warning about your personal Address Book entry: if you 
  store data in there that you don’t want shared, you should disable 
  the export of those private fields. In Address Book, click Edit for 
  your entry, and then uncheck the boxes to the right of the fields 
  you want to keep private. In general, I recommend against storing 
  private data in your Address Book entry, but you might also consider 
  not sharing your birthdate or partner’s name.)

  If exchanging public keys is too much trouble for some reason, 
  DropKey also offers a less-secure password mode. To use it, click 
  the skeleton key icon in DropKey’s dialog; you’ll have to share 
  the password with the recipient in some other fashion. The password 
  mode also works with an unregistered copy of DropKey even after the 
  30-day-trial ends.

  DropKey compresses the files you’ve dropped into its dialog into a 
  Zip archive and then encrypts the archive. It can create a message 
  in Apple Mail (click the Encrypt and Send button below the file 
  list) in a single step, or you can set its preferences to encrypt 
  only (or hold down Option, which changes Encrypt and Send to just 
  Encrypt). That lets you save the encrypted archive to your hard 
  drive, after which you can attach it to a message in any other email 
  program, transfer it via iChat, sync it via a shared Dropbox folder, 
  share it via Dropbox’s Public folder, or use some other means to 
  hand it off.


**DropKey Verification to Prevent Man-in-the-Middle Attacks** -- 
  It’s worth pausing briefly here to note exactly what DropKey is 
  good for, and what it’s not good for. DropKey is _not_ a local 
  encryption solution — while you certainly could encrypt a file 
  locally and delete the original securely, such that the encrypted 
  version was all that existed on your hard disk (and your recipient 
  could do so as well), that’s not the point of the program. 
  Instead, DropKey is designed to protect files in transit between you 
  and a recipient, along the entire path of networks to which you’re 
  connected and servers that might handle your message. (Using SSL/TLS 
  in your email program is good, but protects the communication only 
  between your computer and your SMTP server, leaving attachments 
  vulnerable to snoopers along the way and at the recipient’s email 
  provider.)

  Nevertheless, public-key cryptography can still be subject to 
  “man-in-the-middle attacks,” in which a bad guy eavesdrops on 
  your communications and sends you his public key instead of the one 
  that your recipient would send, presumably forging the email such 
  that you aren’t aware of the substitution. To foil this attack, 
  you use an “out-of-band” method to verify your recipient’s 
  public key. For example, after you send someone your DropKey public 
  key via email, you then make sure it’s the right key using the 
  telephone or secure chat or even an in-person conversation — any 
  method other than email that you feel assured is free of 
  interception or compromise. To make this verification easier, 
  encryption software can create a so-called “fingerprint” that 
  uniquely identifies a very long key with a small number of bytes. 
  Unfortunately, fingerprint verification is rather tedious in 
  practice.

  DropKey can help here, too. WellRedApps has created a small 
  dictionary of words that DropKey uses to let you verify just four 
  bytes of the fingerprint. It turns those four bytes into four words 
  that you can use for verification using any other out-of-band 
  method, like Messages, Skype, or a normal telephone call. I confess 
  to suggesting this idea to the developers, and it makes saying “My 
  key verification is ‘encumbrance stake Zs chum’” rather 
  hilarious.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-04/dropkey_verification_phrase.jpg>

  In DropKey’s Key Manager, you view the entry for a person whose 
  key you’ve received, make sure the words they tell you match, and 
  click Verify. This is almost perfect. (You can have perfect 
  verification only if you confirm the entire fingerprint, but while 
  the odds of a man-in-the-middle being able to compromise this system 
  are not zero, they are infinitesimal.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-04/dropkey_key_manager.jpg>


**The Key to the Future?** -- DropKey is a strong product, but it’s 
  also a version 1.0. Its biggest weakness out of the gate — apart 
  from requiring Lion in a world where many Mac users are still using 
  Snow Leopard — is that the private key that it generates for you 
  at launch is stored in a system keychain, and can’t easily be 
  synced to multiple Macs. If you send and receive email on multiple 
  machines and install DropKey on each, you will confuse senders (as 
  they would need multiple keys for you) and be able to decrypt 
  received files on only the machine that matches the particular key 
  that the sender used. WellRedApps says that it is working on a 
  better approach to this issue. (I don’t know how many people use 
  multiple machines for email. I use two: a desktop and a laptop.)

  I also experienced some minor problems with verifying keys and 
  decrypting files on first launch. After quitting and re-launching 
  DropKey, these problems went away, although a few cosmetic issues 
  with the program persist. I’ve submitted bug reports to the 
  company, and based on past performance, I expect they will be 
  addressed soon.

  For strong encryption without burdensome management of keys, DropKey 
  is a solid solution, and anyone who needs to share encrypted files 
  will appreciate its ease of use — in particular, I can imagine 
  lawyers relying on it heavily to ensure confidentiality when trading 
  drafts of legal documents back and forth with clients, so long as 
  they’re all Lion users.

  DropKey will retail for $29.99, but WellRedApps is offering a $19.99 
  introductory offer for a limited (but unspecified) time, both 
  directly and from the Mac App Store. There’s also a free 30-day 
  trial version that you can get from WellRedApps (since Apple refuses 
  to allow trial versions in the Mac App Store). In a particularly 
  welcome move, when you purchase a copy of DropKey directly from 
  WellRedApps, you also get a coupon for a free second license, since 
  it’s impossible to use DropKey without someone with whom you can 
  exchange files. Those who purchase from the Mac App Store can 
  contact WellRedApps at <support@wellredapps.com> to receive the 
  coupon for the free second license.

<http://www.wellredapps.com/store/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/dropkey/id511169782?mt=12>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12943#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12943>


How to Download EPUB, PDF, and Mobipocket to the Kindle Fire
------------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12921>
  5 comments

  It’s almost hard to remember, but when it came out, iBooks could 
  read only EPUB files, not PDFs, and the only way to load them was by 
  syncing with iTunes. Over a number of releases of both iBooks and 
  iOS, Apple finally arrived where we are now, where you can load 
  ebooks (purchased or downloaded outside the iBookstore) into iBooks 
  from Safari, Mail, and any other iOS app with the necessary document 
  copying support. From our perspective as publishers trying to make 
  our ebooks available to iOS users, support for Web-based downloading 
  was the most important, since it enabled us to let users download 
  ebooks from their Take Control accounts.

  But what about the Kindle? Until the release of the Android-based 
  Kindle Fire, the only way to load ebooks purchased or downloaded 
  outside Amazon’s Kindle Store was via a manual Finder copy to a 
  USB-connected Kindle. The E-Ink versions of the Kindle are 
  remarkably limited in their capabilities beyond actually reading a 
  book (they do have Web browsers, but good luck actually using one 
  for anything beyond the simplest of pages), but the Kindle Fire has 
  an entirely acceptable Web browser and touch interface. 

<http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0051VVOB2/?tag=tidbitselectro00>

  So that raises the question of how Kindle Fire users will interact 
  with our ebooks. The most obvious answer, as with the iBookstore, is 
  that many of our titles can be purchased from the Kindle Store. But 
  it’s hard for us to recommend that because we make vastly less for 
  each copy and because it’s difficult or impossible for readers to 
  create Take Control accounts, get their ebooks in different formats, 
  learn about and download free updates, and get discounts on new 
  editions.

  If you’re a Kindle Fire user, then, you have three basic options: 
  download our ebooks to your computer and copy them to the Kindle 
  manually, download them to the Kindle directly and perform some 
  magic to move them into the proper location, or send them to your 
  Kindle via email. Muddying the issue is the fact that while the 
  Kindle Fire prefers the Mobipocket format, it can also open PDFs 
  and, with some more effort, EPUBs.


**Get a New Reader** -- First off, let’s make sure you can read all 
  three major ebook formats: EPUB, PDF, and Mobipocket. The Kindle 
  Fire handles Mobipocket and PDF internally (it’s actually a Kindle 
  app that’s doing the work), but for EPUB, you’ll need another 
  app. Plus, although the Kindle app can open PDFs, it doesn’t 
  support PDF links, so I recommend using another app for PDFs. 
  Luckily, there are Android ebook reading apps that can read both 
  EPUB and PDF files, with full support for internal PDF links and 
  many other features beyond what the Kindle app can do.

  I tried a number of these apps, and ended up settling on Aldiko Book 
  Reader, which is free, does a good job rendering both EPUB and PDF, 
  supports internal links, and makes it easy to access downloaded or 
  copied ebooks. A close second was Mantano Reader, whose ad-supported 
  free version had essentially the same feature set (there’s also a 
  $4.99 premium version that drops the ads). Bluefire, which also has 
  an iOS version (see “OverDrive, Bluefire, and the EPUBlic 
  Library,” 18 February 2011), works well for reading, but requires 
  serious hoop jumping to import downloaded ebooks.

<http://www.aldiko.com/>
<http://www.mantano.com/mantano-reader-for-android/>
<http://www.bluefirereader.com/bluefire-reader.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/11980>

  Getting Aldiko Book Reader onto your Kindle Fire takes some effort. 
  In a protectionist move that puts even Apple to shame, Amazon 
  prevents EPUB reading apps from being accessed from the Kindle Fire, 
  even though the company allows EPUB reading apps to be in the Amazon 
  Appstore for Android for other devices. Plus, the Kindle Fire 
  isn’t compatible with Google Play (previously known as the Android 
  Marketplace), so I was unable to get Aldiko Book Reader from there 
  (though at least one commenter was). But since Android is much less 
  locked down than iOS, you can install anything you can download, as 
  long as you run through these steps first:

1. Tap the gear button in the upper right corner of the screen to 
   access the Kindle Fire’s settings. 

2. Tap More > Device.

3. Turn on Allow Installation of Applications From Unknown Sources. 

  (A brief aside: Given the prevalence of malware in Android apps 
  acquired through “alternative markets,” I strongly recommend you 
  turn that setting back off after you install Aldiko Book Reader. And 
  if you do want to install other apps not available from the Amazon 
  Appstore for Android, go directly to the company in question and 
  avoid random app stores that might come up with a simple search.)

  Luckily, Aldiko Book Reader is relatively easily downloaded from the 
  company’s Download page using the Kindle Fire’s Web browser; 
  just enter your email address in the field and click the Grab It 
  button. (When I did this, I got an error about the server not being 
  able to send me email, but it provided a link to download directly, 
  which worked fine — zoom in on the page and tap and hold on it if 
  you have trouble tapping it.) Then tap the Menu button at the bottom 
  of the screen, tap Downloads in the pop-up button menu, and tap 
  aldiko-standard-200160.apk (or whatever yours ends up being called) 
  to install Aldiko Book Reader.

<http://www.aldiko.com/download.html>

  For the most part, opening a book in Aldiko Book Reader is 
  self-explanatory — from its main screen, tap Shelf View or List 
  View to see your loaded ebooks, or tap Files to show the Kindle 
  Fire’s file system and open or import ebooks from any local 
  location. Reading is similarly obvious: tap on the right or left 
  side of the screen to page forward or backward, or swipe left or 
  right. However, two tips will improve your experience:

* While reading an EPUB book, tap Menu > Settings > More and turn off 
  Advanced Formatting so the publisher’s styles and formatting are 
  honored. (Obviously, this is optional, but in my admittedly biased 
  opinion, our ebooks look better when our styles are honored.) This 
  is a global setting and will be remembered.

* When tapping links in Aldiko Book Reader (and this was true in other 
  apps I tried as well), you have to be a little careful, since a tap 
  on the screen generally brings up controls. My experience was that 
  very quick, light taps worked the best for following links without 
  invoking the control display.

  With that done, the next question is, how do you get a book into the 
  Kindle Fire, either to read in its native Kindle app (for Mobipocket 
  files) or in Aldiko Book Reader (for EPUB and PDF)? There are three 
  approaches: direct USB transfer from a Mac or PC, direct downloading 
  via the Kindle Fire’s Web browser, and email via the Kindle 
  Personal Documents Service.


**Load Ebooks via USB** -- Copying an ebook to the Kindle Fire via a 
  USB cable is simple, but it does require that you have access to a 
  Mac or PC and a micro-USB cable. Assuming both of those are true, 
  follow these steps:

1. Connect the Kindle Fire to your computer with the micro-USB cable. 
   If necessary, wake the Kindle Fire up and swipe the slider to get 
   to the page that tells you that you can transfer files. Once the 
   Kindle Fire is properly mounted as a USB disk, you’ll see it in 
   the Finder window sidebar, under Devices, as KINDLE. Click it to 
   view the Kindle Fire’s file system.

2. Open a second Finder window, and navigate to wherever you keep the 
   ebooks you want to copy to the Kindle Fire.

3. Drag the desired ebook to the desired spot in the Kindle file 
   system. Where it goes depends on the file type and how you plan to 
   read it.

   * Mobipocket: Drag the file to KINDLE/Documents to have it appear
     in the Docs page in the Kindle Fire’s home screen. You can 
     also drag Mobipocket files to KINDLE/Books, but they will still 
     appear in the Docs page, not the Books page. Copying files to the 
     Books directory goes against Amazon’s instructions; presumably 
     Amazon wants it to hold only purchased ebooks. (Technically, you
     can put a PDF file in KINDLE/Documents, but then tapping it will
     open it only in the Kindle app, which isn’t nearly as good a PDF
     reader as Aldiko Book Reader.)

   * EPUB and PDF: Although some ebook reader apps (notably Bluefire)
     have a special import directory, Aldiko Book Reader can load
     EPUB and PDF files from anywhere in the Kindle Fire’s file 
     system (at least the user-writable space). So, it doesn’t matter 
     where you copy the files, but for sanity’s sake, I recommend you 
     put them in the KINDLE/eBooks directory that Aldiko Book Reader 
     creates.

4. Click the eject button in a Finder window’s sidebar, and tap the 
   Disconnect button on the Kindle Fire’s screen.

5. If you’re copying files for use in the built-in Kindle app, 
   you’re done. Mobipocket and PDF files copied to the Documents 
   directory appear in the Docs page and can be opened in the Kindle 
   app from there.

6. If you’re copying files for use in Aldiko Book Reader, one more 
   set of steps is necessary:

   1. In the Apps page, launch Aldiko Book Reader and tap the Files 
      button on the main screen to view the Kindle Fire’s file system. 

   2. Navigate into the eBooks directory.

   3. Tap a book and tap either Open or Import to open it temporarily
      or import it permanently into Aldiko Book Reader’s library. 

   Either way, the file remains in the eBooks directory, so if you 
   import it, you may want to delete it from the eBooks directory 
   later.


**Load Ebooks via the Web** -- Downloading an ebook from the Web 
  requires a slightly different approach, because although the Kindle 
  Fire’s Web browser can download files of any type, they end up in 
  KINDLE/Download, and the Kindle app is inexplicably incapable of 
  opening even Mobipocket files from the browser’s Downloads page. 
  So, if you’re downloading Mobipocket files to read in the Kindle 
  app, follow these steps after you have downloaded one or more files.

1. Tap Apps on the Kindle Fire’s home screen, then tap Store to go 
   into the Amazon Appstore for Android.

2. Search for “File Expert” (it’s a free file management app 
   that lets you browse and manipulate files on the Kindle Fire — a 
   radical concept for iOS users!). When you find it, tap the Free 
   button, and, once it morphs, the Get App button.

3. Once File Expert has downloaded, tap the Open button (or just open 
   it from the Apps page like any other app). File Expert displays a 
   list of top-level collections.

4. Tap My Files > SD Card > Download and tap and hold on the file you 
   want to work with. A File Operations dialog appears.

5. Tap Cut (you’re going to move the file), tap the Back button at 
   the bottom of the screen to navigate up a level in the file system, 
   tap Documents, and tap Paste. File Expert moves the file from the 
   Download directory to the Documents directory.

6. Return to the Kindle Fire’s home screen, tap Docs, and see if the 
   file you just moved appears. If it doesn’t (it didn’t in my 
   tests), restart your Kindle Fire by pressing and holding the 
   physical Sleep button for several seconds, tapping the Shut Down 
   button, and then pressing the Sleep button again to power up the 
   device.

   (Honestly, I was shocked that this restart was necessary, but 
   apparently the Kindle Fire’s interface software isn’t smart 
   enough to detect file system changes that take place behind its
   back — in other words, that don’t occur via Amazon’s preferred 
   direct USB method.)

  Luckily, thanks to Aldiko Book Reader’s capability of opening or 
  importing files from any directory on the Kindle Fire, none of this 
  fuss is necessary for downloaded EPUB and PDF files. Instead, follow 
  these steps after downloading the files:

1. Launch Aldiko Book Reader.

2. Tap the Files button on the main screen to view the Kindle Fire’s 
   file system.

3. Navigate into the Download directory and tap a book to open it (for 
   a quick peek) or import it (for repeated reading) into Aldiko Book 
   Reader’s library. 

  Either way, the file remains in the Download directory, so if you 
  import it, you may want to delete it from the Download directory 
  later, which you can do from either File Expert or the browser’s 
  Download page.


**Load Ebooks via Email** -- This final approach — email via 
  Amazon’s Kindle Personal Documents Service — works only for a 
  small set of file formats, including Mobipocket and PDF, but not 
  EPUB. Though there is a fee for sending documents to E-Ink Kindles 
  that rely on Whispernet, Wi-Fi-based transfers, which are all that 
  are possible on the Kindle Fire, are free.

<https://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html/ref=hp_pdoc_main_short_us?nodeId=200767340>

  There are other requirements too. Email attachments must be sent 
  from an address you have added to an approved list, must be sent to 
  your special kindle.com email address (it’s listed in the Kindle 
  Fire’s Docs page), must be less than 50 MB, and must be in one of 
  the following formats (note the lack of EPUB). And you can send no 
  more than 25 attachments at once.

* Documents: AZW, TXT, PDF, MOBI, PRC, DOC, DOCX
* Audio supported within Music: MP3, DRM-free AAC, MIDI, OGG, WAV
* Images: JPEG, GIF, PNG, BMP
* Video: MP4, VP8

  Mobipocket and PDF files that you send to your Kindle Fire via email 
  show up in the Documents directory and appear in the Docs page. 
  Unsupported file formats like EPUB are dropped in transit — they 
  never arrive on the device, and Amazon sends you email telling you 
  that they’re not accepted. 

  To read a PDF sent to a Kindle Fire via email, assuming you’re 
  using Aldiko Book Reader, just navigate to the Documents directory 
  and open or import the file as you would a document loaded in any 
  other fashion.


**Final Recommendations** -- Some publishers restrict themselves to 
  certain formats, but if you have a choice, as you do with our Take 
  Control ebooks, I recommend that you standardize on the EPUB format 
  and Aldiko Book Reader (or some other competent EPUB reader). 

  When comparing with Mobipocket, I prefer EPUB because it’s more 
  likely that a publisher will convert an EPUB to get a Mobipocket 
  file (that’s what we do). As a result, the Mobipocket versions of 
  ebooks may suffer from conversion artifacts and other issues.

  When comparing with PDF, I also prefer EPUB because PDF is not a 
  reflowable format, and the small screen of the Kindle Fire makes 
  reading a full-page PDF an effort unless you have extremely good 
  vision. You can zoom in, of course, but then it’s more difficult 
  to navigate around in the PDF.

  Regardless, though, with the instructions here, you should be able 
  to use your Kindle Fire to access and read any DRM-free ebook you 
  want, in EPUB, PDF, or Mobipocket format. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12921#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12921>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 23 April 2012
-------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12950>

**Quicksilver ß67** -- The resurrected Quicksilver utility lives to 
  launch another day with an update to version ß67. It has a 
  smattering of additions and improvements, including monitoring of 
  running applications and processes in real time, improved catalog 
  search speed, and rejiggering and simplification of preferences. But 
  ß67 is largely a maintenance release that squashes a number of 
  bugs, including a fix for “odd behavior” when grabbing multiple 
  items in the Finder, correct resolution of wildcards in paths and 
  restoration of docked panels, and putting a stop to duplicating 
  objects in the catalog when added to the object history. (Free, 2.4 
  MB, release notes)

<http://qsapp.com/>
<http://qsapp.com/changelog.php>

  Read/post comments about Quicksilver ß67.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12946#comments>


**LaunchBar 5.2** -- Objective Development has released LaunchBar 5.2 
  with a vast number of improvements and fixes to the keyboard 
  launching utility. You can now create calendar entries without iCal 
  running as well as specify multiple alerts (separating each one with 
  a space). It also offers improved performance with iTunes, including 
  playback from large iTunes libraries, compatibility with iCloud 
  remote tracks and iTunes Match, and improved detection of classical 
  genres. The update improves the Recent Items list to include browsed 
  folders, adds invoked text actions to the text input history for use 
  in subsequent text actions, uses the Spotlight index for retrieving 
  the locations of all installed applications, and retains the menu 
  bar display of the currently active application when LaunchBar is 
  opened via hotkey. The release also fixes placement of the LaunchBar 
  window in fullscreen mode, ensures the bar opens when switching to 
  LaunchBar via Command-Tab, corrects an issue with displaying search 
  results when the LaunchBar window is positioned at the bottom of the 
  screen, and more. LaunchBar 5.2 now requires Mac OS X 10.6 or later 
  (but LaunchBar 5.1 remains available for those running an older 
  version of Mac OS X). ($35 new with a 20-percent discount for 
  TidBITS members, free update, 2.1 MB, release notes)

<http://www.obdev.at/products/launchbar/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.obdev.at/products/launchbar/releasenotes5.html>

  Read/post comments about LaunchBar 5.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12945#comments>


**Suitcase Fusion 4** -- Font management utility Suitcase Fusion from 
  Extensis has been updated to version 4 with a wealth of new 
  features. It introduces the Extensis Font Panel to Adobe InDesign, 
  Illustrator, and Photoshop, enabling you to activate fonts on the 
  fly. Additionally, WebINK users can use the Font Panel in Photoshop 
  to create design comps and previews using WebINK fonts. An 
  auto-activation plug-in has been added for Adobe InCopy CS4, CS5, 
  and CS5.5, ensuring that shared InDesign documents will display the 
  same fonts. Other additions include the capability to set font and 
  background colors used in the Previews pane, easier selection of 
  fonts for grouped sets and favorites, display of both PostScript 
  font names and font names as they appear in your app’s Fonts menu, 
  and free access to over 500 font families from Google Web Fonts. 
  ($99.95 new, $49.95 upgrade from previous versions, 63 MB, release 
  notes)

<http://www.extensis.com/suitcase-fusion-4/>
<http://www.extensis.com/downloads/release-notes/suitcase-fusion-4-mac/>

  Read/post comments about Suitcase Fusion 4.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12942#comments>


ExtraBITS for 23 April 2012
---------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12949>

  Two quick bits this week: Michael Cohen’s Tech Night Owl Live 
  podcast appearance to discuss the antitrust lawsuit against Apple 
  and major publishers, and an Apple promotion that gives copies of 
  Snow Leopard away to Leopard-using MobileMe holdouts.


**Ebooks and the DOJ Suit on the Tech Night Owl Live** -- On the Tech 
  Night Owl Live podcast, host Gene Steinberg and TidBITS contributor 
  and Take Control author Michael E. Cohen discuss the Department of 
  Justice’s price-fixing lawsuit against Apple and five major 
  publishers and consider what it may mean for the future of ebook 
  publishing.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-april-14-2012-kirk-mcelhearn-michael-e-cohen-and-dan-frakes/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12944#comments>


**Free Copy of Snow Leopard for Leopard-Using MobileMe Holdouts** -- 
  Thanks to Macgasm for pointing out that Apple is now giving away 
  free DVD copies of Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard to MobileMe users 
  still running on 10.5 Leopard. This is to aid those users in making 
  the jump to 10.7 Lion (which must still be purchased from the Mac 
  App Store for $29.99) and thus iCloud before MobileMe’s 30 June 
  2012 shutoff date. Of course, a copy of Snow Leopard won’t help 
  those still using PowerPC-based Macs, which can’t upgrade past 
  Leopard, but if you’ve simply been dragging your feet, this is a 
  nice enticement to make the switch.

<http://www.macgasm.net/2012/04/18/apple-now-giving-away-snow-leopard-to-mobileme-customers-for-free/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12909#comments>


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