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Month: November 2007

World faces ‘cyber cold war’ threat, report says

Posted on November 30, 2007December 30, 2021 by admini

Intelligence agencies already routinely test other states’ networks looking for weaknesses and their techniques are growing more sophisticated every year, it said. Governments must urgently shore up their defenses against industrial espionage and attacks on infrastructure. It said China has been blamed for attacks in the United States, India, and Germany. “The Chinese were first to use cyberattacks for political and military goals,” James Mulvenon, director of the Center for Intelligence and Research in Washington, was quoted as saying in the report.

The report was compiled with input from academics and officials from Britain’s Serious Organized Crime Agency, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, and NATO.

http://www.news.com/World-faces-cyber-cold-war-threat%2C-report-says/2100-7349_3-6220619.html?tag=ne.fd.mnbc

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Majority companies feel they are secure against the risk of data leaks

Posted on November 30, 2007December 30, 2021 by admini

Just 39% of respondents said their company had an endpoint security solution, to protect PCs against unauthorised access or malware.

Organisations have to protect their data, themselves and their employees against the risks of possible data leaks, and automation is the only way to do that.The survey also showed that companies strongly agree (85%) with mandatory notification of affected parties in the event of a data breach, as is the law in the US.

http://www.net-security.org/secworld.php?id=5640

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Study: ‘Huge jump’ in Microsoft flaws since last year

Posted on November 30, 2007December 30, 2021 by admini

Alan Paller, director of research for the Sans Institute, a computer-security training organization, said that the reason more vulnerabilities were being found was that it was becoming increasingly profitable for crooks to target the software.

http://www.news.com/Study-Huge-jump-in-Microsoft-flaws-since-last-year/2100-1002_3-6220719.html?tag=nefd.top

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Report Details Real Costs of Data Breaches

Posted on November 29, 2007December 30, 2021 by admini

“A few years ago, you wouldn’t have a marketing officer concerned with a data breach. That was an IT problem. Nowadays all the execs around a boardroom table are concerned about it,” John Dasher, director of product management for PGP told InternetNews.com. “If I’m a marketing officer, the last thing I want to do is spend marketing money doing brand damage repair because of a breach.”

The report, called “The 2007 Annual Study: Cost of a Data Breach,” comes from a detailed analysis of 35 data breach incidents involving fewer than 4,000 records to more than 125,000 records.

The TJX breach, initially believed to be a small deal, has grown enormously expensive for the retailer. TJX in August announced it would take a $118 million charge related to the costs and potential liability resulting from the theft of more than 45 million credit and debit accounts. “This is one of the first widely publicized examples of how a data breach can affect you, your shareholders, and your stock price,” said Dasher. But Peter Firstbrook, security research analyst for Gartner, disputes this scale of impact. “How do they know how much revenue would have accrued before the breach? Our research shows that most consumers do not actually change business after a breach. Check out TJMax’s sales before and after their incident,” he said in an e-mail to InternetNews.com. Firstbrook appears to make a valid point. TJX may have gotten a black eye but sales rose 8 percent in the third quarter of 2007 compared to the same quarter last year, and the company plans to add more than 1,000 new stores in the next few years.

The report also claims that the average total per-incident costs in 2007 were $6.3 million, a 31 percent increase from the 2006 average per-incident cost of $4.8 million. On the bright side, if there is such a thing, the cost of notification fell 40 percent because firms got better at notifying their customers when a breach occurred.

One of the biggest vulnerabilities is found when data is stored, disseminated and shared with third parties. Outsourcers, contractors, consultants and business partners accounted for 40 percent of breaches, up from 29 percent in 2006. External breaches also cost more, averaging $231 compared to $171 per record.

The Real Point Of Vulnerability?
While outsourcing and third parties are a weakness, the notion of the nefarious hacker sniffing traffic coming into Amazon and Overstock may be overblown. Instead, it’s brick-and-mortar retail outlets like TJX stores that are the weak link. This past Sunday, the TV news magazine 60 Minutes showed how many retail outlets don’t secure the wireless networks of their stores. Sitting in a car with some computer experts with a laptop, correspondent Leslie Stahl showed how easy it was to pick up on wireless transmissions in the stores. “It makes sense because companies like Amazon that are born and bred of technology have a good security model from the beginning,” said Dasher. “A lot of brick-and-mortar companies don’t have this. They have conflicting setups. Some of them are still using a DOS-based point-of-sale system.” This disparity may prove retail’s real challenge compared to its online counterparts. Beyond the convenience and the chance to avoid paying sales tax, if an Amazon purchase is viewed as safer than an in-store purchase, it poses a real problem for traditional retail stores. “Retail is going to have to spend more effort on this issue, but it may prove harder for them,” Dasher said. “[Retailers] are starting off with a poorer hand they have been dealt with, since many of them use a custom point-of-sale system, so they can’t bolt on a quick aftermarket security fix.”

For some financial services firms, security breaches can often be the unfortunate result of living in the past. Many firms come from a background of mainframes connected via leased lines, so they have a history of doing insecure transactions over secured networks. With the advent of the Internet, they now have to do secure transactions over a very insecure network. “So it’s not surprising they may have had a false sense of security over their position,” said Dasher. Firstbook thinks more emphasis needs to be placed on the human element rather than focusing on the security products sold by the two companies that sponsored the report. “Besides technology, minimizing the risk of data breaches will involve lots of manual processes like data identification and classification data clean up and changes to procedures—as well as a health dose of user education,” he said. “Some technologies can help but they are not solutions.”

http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.php/3713261

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Client, Application Flaws Top SANS Vulnerability List

Posted on November 28, 2007December 30, 2021 by admini

“Vulnerabilities on the client side have exploded over the last year,” says Rohit Dhamankar, senior manager of security research at TippingPoint and project manager for the SANS study.

One of the most critical vulnerabilities to computer security is “gullible, busy, accommodating computer users — including executives, IT staff, and others with privileged access — who follow false instructions provided in spear phishing emails, leading to empty bank accounts, compromise of major military systems around the world, compromise of government contractors, industrial espionage, and much more,” the report states.

The number three vulnerability on this year’s list is “critical vulnerabilities in software on personal computers inside and outside enterprises (client-side vulnerabilities) allowing these systems to be turned into zombies and recruited into botnets — and also allowing them to be used as back doors for stealing information from and taking over servers inside large organizations.”

Enterprises may not be able to solve these two problems entirely, but they can reduce the risk by limiting administrative privileges and restricting users’ ability to download and install applications, SANS says.

As it did last year, SANS put Microsoft Windows vulnerabilities among the most serious on the list, but it is home-grown applications that present the greatest threat, according to the report.

http://www.darkreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=139984&WT.svl=news1_4

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Reaching For The Next SaaS Wave

Posted on November 10, 2007December 30, 2021 by admini

Several hundred attendees, ranging from established tech players to upstarts hoping to carve out a niche in this booming space, came in search of new ideas, potential business partners and maybe even a little validation of their emerging Web 2.0 strategies.

“What’s clear to me as I look out into this room is that I’m looking at the future of the software industry,” Donald Proctor, senior vice president of Cisco’s collaboration software group, said during his keynote address kicking off the conference.

Unified communications—the cobbling together of instant messaging, Web conferencing, e-mail, desk phones, mobile phones, blogs and all the other tools employees and businesses use to communicate into one central location or platform—and collaboration—the tools and processes needed for meaningful productivity—have replaced customer relationship management (CRM) (define) as the markets of choice for the SaaS crowd. That’s partly because those applications lend themselves so well to a browser-based distribution model and partly because they’re precisely the type of applications employees and companies need to manage their data and business processes online.

Cisco CEO John Chambers, during a conference call Wednesday with analysts following the company’s first-quarter earnings report, couldn’t have been more clear when he repeatedly said unified communications and collaboration will not only be the key to Cisco’s growth in the next 10 years but will “drive the next wave of productivity around the world.”

Cisco isn’t the only company that’s caught on this tectonic shift in communications. “It’s enabling people to collaborate on documents that matter,” said Erik Larson, director of marketing and product management for Adobe’s business productivity unit. Larson said boundaries such as time and physical locations or technology platforms and disparate browsers have impeded productivity for years.

http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.php/3710121

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