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Author: admini

Three more U.S. states add laws on data breaches

Posted on January 6, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

For companies that do business nationally or in various states, the smorgasbord of state laws poses a growing problem, because the measures often specify different triggers for notifications and set varying requirements on what needs to be disclosed, to whom and when, said Kirk Herath, chief privacy officer at Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. in Columbus, Ohio.

In addition, some states require companies to provide credit-monitoring services to affected customers, whereas others don’t, Herath said.

http://www.networkworld.com/news/2006/010606-data-breaches-law.html

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Why Asset-Based Security Makes Sense

Posted on January 6, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

Processes, procedures and tactical operations must be driven by strategic goals based on your critical assets to ensure that the security program is in step with the enterprise’s business needs. As a result of this alignment with business needs, a strategic security program will enable business and provide tangible metrics to demonstrate its effectiveness.

In an asset-based security program, the information gained by each operational process is tied to the relevant assets. By focusing on the critical assets that your security program is in place to protect, you put in place an underlying foundation that individual security processes can link into. Think of your assets as being the “glue” that holds together a strategic security program, allowing the information gained by one individual process to be readily utilized to by the other processes. And by enabling the flow of information between security processes that are typically isolated “information silos,” you set in place the mechanism that drives continuous improvement across your entire security program.

Tactically speaking, asset-based security allows you to better manage operational workflow by pointing out which security efforts would reduce the most risk. A few days before, several vulnerabilities were publicly disclosed detailing exploitable flaws in your databases. During peak business hours, your IDS detects many possible incidents including a buffer overflow attack directed at your R&D database server. Because your security program is integrated around your assets, the R&D database server is immediately recognized as a highly critical asset that, according to the newly disclosed vulnerability data and ongoing vulnerability scans, is vulnerable to the buffer overflow attack detected by your IDS. The incident stands out from the rest of the alerts and is escalated as the highest priority and your security team reallocates their resources to mitigate the threat immediately, maintaining the integrity of your intellectual property.

Strategically speaking, an asset-based security program keeps intruders out by ensuring that all individual security processes are focused on what matters most to your business-the risk faced by your critical assets. Regardless of what the preferred method of attack will be in the future, the target will still remain the same.

http://www.net-security.org/article.php?id=888

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Security flaws on the rise, questions remain

Posted on January 5, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

The most important, and perhaps obvious, lesson is that the software flaws are here to stay, said Peter Mell, a senior computer scientist for the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the creator of the National Vulnerability Database (NVD), one of the four databases surveyed. “The problem of people breaking into computers is not going away any time soon,” Mell said. “There is certainly more patches every year that system administrators need to install, but the caveat is that more vulnerabilities seem to apply to less important software.”

In 2005, NIST created the National Vulnerability Database and software makers and security service providers have cooperated to create the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS), a standardized measure of the severity of software flaws. The National Vulnerability Database completed scoring flaws in its database using the CVSS in late November.

Four databases were surveyed: The Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) Coordination Center’s database, the National Vulnerability Database (NVD), the Open-Source Vulnerability Database (OSVDB), and the Symantec Vulnerability Database.

The number of flaws cataloged by each database in 2005 varied widely, because of differing definitions of what constitutes a vulnerability and differing editorial policy. The OSVDB–which counted the highest number of flaws in 2005 at 7,187–breaks down vulnerabilities into their component parts, so what another database might classify as one flaw might be assigned multiple entries.

SecurityFocus had the lowest count of the vulnerabilities at 3,766.

The variations in editorial policy and lack of cross-referencing between databases as well as unmeasurable biases in the research community and disclosure policy mean that the databases–or refined vulnerability information (RVI) sources–do not produce statistics that can be meaningfully compared, Steve Christey, the editor of the Common Vulnerability and Exposures (CVE), wrote in an e-mail to security mailing lists on Thursday. The CVE is a dictionary of security issues compiled by The MITRE Corp., a government contractor and nonprofit organization. “In my opinion, RVI sources are still a year or two away from being able to produce reliable, repeatable, and comparable statistics,” he wrote. “In general, consumers should treat current statistics as suggestive, not conclusive.” Recent numbers produced by the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT) revealed some of the problems with refined vulnerability sources. Some mainstream media outlets noted the number, compared it to the CERT Coordination Center’s previous data–which is compiled from a different set of vulnerability reports–and concluded there was a 38 percent increase in vulnerabilities in 2005 over the previous year. In fact, discounting the updated reports resulted in a 41 percent decrease to 3,074 vulnerabilities, according to an analysis done by Alan Wylie, an independent computer programmer. If the data point could be compared with statistics from CERT/CC, that would have placed the number of flaws reported in line with the previous three years. The computer scientist conducted an informal survey of entries for flaws in products from well-known companies and found that six of 14 software makers had seen a doubling in the number of vulnerability reports, while another four firms saw a decrease in the number of reports.

http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11367?ref=rss

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Mobile malware, phishing activities to surge in 2006

Posted on January 5, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

The perception that the threat of mobile malware was much less than that of its PC counterpart would encourage virus writers to come up with even more sophisticated threats, the McAfee AVERT Labs added.

Apart from mobile malware, phishing scams would also continue to rise this year, with attacks to become more targeted through the use of spyware programs and password stealers, McAfee AVERT Labs said.

http://news.inq7.net/infotech/index.php?index=1&story_id=62081

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IDC: IT Spending to Hit 5% Stride

Posted on January 5, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

“Then last month they more than doubled their spending outlook when users realized the economy was still perking along,” John Gantz, IDC’s Chief Research Officer, said in a statement.

IDC’s forecast of 5 percent growth in U.S. IT spending growth in 2006 is double the 2.5 percent forecast earlier this week by Merrill Lynch.

http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.php/3575466

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Take it with a grain of salt: Linux/Unix Vulnerabilities Outnumber Windows

Posted on January 4, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

In the US-CERT (United Stated Computer Emergency Readiness Team) year-end vulnerability summary, Linux/Unix accounted for a whopping 2,328 vulnerabilities, about 45 percent of the 5,198 total.

Windows, on the other hand, sported just 812 vulnerabilities during the year, said US-CERT, or 16 percent of the total.

Another 2,058 vulnerabilities affected more than one operating system.

http://www.securitypipeline.com/news/175801169

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