Infosecurity News

  1. Waledec botnet sweeps web in July 4 campaign

    The team behind the Waledec botnet mounted a new malware campaign over the July 4 weekend that has infected thousands of PCs.

  2. Internet luring law to include sending of sexually explicit messages - 'sexting'

    The state of Colorado has updated a law designed to protect children on the internet from sending of sexually explicit messages, known as 'sexting', to include cell phones too.

  3. Gartner expects IT spending to fall 6% in 2009

    Worlwide IT spending could fall 6% to US$3.2 trillion in 2009, according to Connecticut-based IT research and advisory company Gartner.

  4. Online game EVE sees virtual EBank robbed by CEO

    The CEO of a virtual gaming bank within the space trading game EVE Online, has run off with 200bn of virtual credits trading them in for real world cash of £3115 (US$5100) through the black market.

  5. BT assists Metropolitan Police in security enquiries

    UK telecoms giant BT has secured a prestigious deal to provide officers and staff at London's Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) with new identity and access management services

  6. Data leakage webinar coming up

    Data leakage - one of the IT security hot topics of the moment - is on the agenda of a joint Cyber-Ark/Websense webinar being broadcast live at 3pm today, and available via the Infosecurity web site on a recorded basis after that time.

  7. Weekly Brief - June 30 2009

    Danny Bradbury explores some of the more interesting stories in the security field from the last week.

  8. Java delays approval of Oracle’s Sun takeover

    The US Department of Justice (DoJ) wants more time to consider Oracle's $7.4bn Sun deal before giving its approval.

  9. Pirate Bay web streaming service - could it be legal?

    The Pirate Bay - arguably one of the highest profile file-sharing indexing portals in the world - has hit the headlines with plans to launch a video streaming/sharing website ostensibly similar to Russian sites such as Movieberry.com

  10. Sanford's mistress: my Hotmail account was hacked.

    The Argentinian woman at the centre of the Mark Sanford scandal has said that her Hotmail account was hacked.

  11. Iceman pleads guilty in Carders Market card data theft case

    Max Butler - aka Max Vision and Iceman - has pleaded guilty to two counts of wire fraud in connection with the theft of almost two million credit and debit card details, as well as an astonishing $86 million of allegedly fraudulent purchases.

  12. Interoute offers free desktop internet security barometer

    Interoute, the internet backbone carrier, has released a free 'internet barometer' desktop application that displays the state of the global internet, as well as potential threats to the net's IP-based infrastructure.

  13. Turning the spotlight on IT’s dirty little secret: Securing the common point of failure in IT risk controls

    Check out BrookCourt's whitepaper on how the rise of identity and access management has revolutionised how the enterprise defines a key domain of IT risk control.

  14. Spammers use Michael Jackson's death to harvest email addresses

    Spammers are using the death of music legend Michael Jackson to harvest unsuspecting computer users' email addresses for future spam campaigns.

  15. Google launches Anti-Malvertising.com site

    Google have launched Anti-Malvertising.com to assist its advertisers in spotting potential providers of malicious advertisements. Finjan, specialising in secure web gateway products and unified web security for the enterprise market,have welcomed this launch.

  16. SMEs hit by increasing spear phishing attacks

    A European-based gang behind sophisticated and targeted phishing attacks on small and medium enterprises has returned after a five-month break, says security firm iDefense.

  17. ATM malware likely to spread

    The malware that has been infecting automated teller machines in eastern Europe could be about to spread to other places in the world, according to the company that uncovered the fraud. Experts at SpiderLab, the research arm of security firm Trustwave, say that there is "increased activity" around this particular strain of malware in other parts of the world.

  18. Parcelforce customer data revealed

    Parcelforce customers' names addresses and postcodes were available online after a system related to the company's mail tracker service failed.

  19. Government ordered to publish reviews of risky IT projects

    The information commissioner has ordered the opening of confidential files on a wide range of high-risk IT projects, including the ID cards scheme, joined up police intelligence systems and the NHS National Programme for IT (NPfIT).

  20. Microsoft wireless keyboard cracking technology revealed

    Users of Microsoft's Optical 1000 and 2000 keyboards should now take extreme care what data they enter using their wireless keyboards, as Dreamlab has taken the unusual step of publishing a 49 page presentation on how to `sniff' any keystrokes out of the ether.

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