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Month: May 2008

More April malware trends

Posted on May 5, 2008December 30, 2021 by admini

In April, Hong Kong reclaimed the top-spot from Switzerland as the most spammed country with spam levels reaching 83.7 percent of all email. Spam levels in the US reached 70.1 percent in April, 75 percent in Canada and 66.2 percent in the UK.

Virus activity fell across almost all regions in April, with the largest decrease in India at 0.69 percent, which takes it out of the top five targeted countries. Virus levels fell across many industry verticals during April.

Spam levels fluctuated across several industry sectors in April, with Manufacturing remaining the top vertical for spam activity at 82 percent. The greatest rise was noted in the Accomodation and Catering sector, where spam levels rose by 5.06 percent to 79.5 percent. Spam levels for the Retail sector were 75 percent, 70.8 percent for Public Sector and 68 percent for Finance.

http://www.net-security.org/malware_news.php?id=939

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Net vendors demo improved security protocol

Posted on May 5, 2008December 30, 2021 by admini

“NAC 1.0 is key in controlling who gets on the network, but the problem is there are many new kinds of nodes like inventory control devices and robots, and they all have an IP address and so users need to control them,” said Steve Hanna a distinguished engineer at Juniper Networks who co-chairs the Trusted Network Connect committee that developed the protocol.

http://www.eetimes.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=207501479

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Groups warn travelers to limit laptop data

Posted on May 3, 2008December 30, 2021 by admini

The letter came ten days after a federal appeals court in the Central District of California ruled that border agents could search laptops without reasonable suspicion of illegal activity. “In a free country, the government cannot have unlimited power to read, seize, store and use all information on any electronic device carried by any traveler entering or leaving the nation,” the signatories stated in the letter.

The level of surveillance by the United States government has become an increasing worry to civil-rights advocates as well as professional, minority and religious groups that believe their members could be targeted.

As part of its “War on Terror,” the Bush Administration has instituted a program to eavesdrop on Internet and phone communications, an initiative that violates the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) and has become the focus of a battle in Congress to craft a new law to govern such wiretapping.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital-rights group and one of the sponsors of the letter, has requested information on the conditions that would trigger a digital search by border agents. “We don’t really know what the Department of Homeland Security’s procedures and practices are here,” said Marcia Hofman, a staff attorney with the EFF.

The case at the heart of the debate concerns whether evidence from the July 2005 search of a laptop owned by then-43-year-old Michael Arnold can be used by prosecutors. Returning from a three-week trip from the Philippines, Arnold was stopped by customs agents in Los Angeles International Airport and asked to show that his laptop was functioning, according to court filings. Perusing through the files in those folders, the agents found pictures of two nude women and decided to conduct a more thorough investigation, which turned up suspected child pornography.

The Association of Corporate Travel Executives, one of the letter’s signers, recommended that workers not use their personal laptops for international travel and limit the amount of proprietary and personal data stored on any notebook computer taken across borders. “In a time of heightened international security, it will take a brave Congress to rule that parties may not be subject to suspicionless searches,” Susan Gurley, the executive director of ACTE, said in a statement.

Following the ruling, there is nothing preventing authorities from a more comprehensive search program, said Fred Schneider, a privacy and security expert and professor of computer science at Cornell University. “It won’t be long before customs agents can efficiently perform a thorough search on every machine,” Jennifer Granick, civil liberties director at the EFF, said in a discussion of the impact of the ruling.

Encrypting the hard drive, having a separate account on the PC owned by the worker’s company, or traveling with a clean laptop and using an encrypted VPN to access data are all possibilities, Granick said.

http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11516?ref=rss

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