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Author: admini

Techies don’t get security either

Posted on September 15, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

He explained that large organisations thrive by having a developed understanding of risk, and by accepting it when it offers a business advantage.

Instead of the ability to scare budgets out of chief information security officers, a future risk management officer will be well-versed in communication and project management skills and more likely to have trained in business school than as a techie. “The days of security being handled by the ‘network person’ who did security in their spare time are over and increasingly we are seeing seasoned professionals with real business experience and business school qualifications stepping into the security space.” Business people also need to adapt and realise the security cannot be achieved by technology and needs to be built into a corporate culture. This will require cultural, behavioural, procedural and technical change, according to Gartner.

Proctor made his comments during a presentation at the Gartner IT Security Summit in London.

http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11317

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One-In-Six Spyware Apps Tries To Steal Identities

Posted on September 14, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

About one-in-six pieces of spyware — a category that also includes adware — is “specifically designed for identity theft,” said Aladdin in a statement.

Another 25 percent of the spyware examined gathers information non-identity information, but was classified by Aladdin as a “moderate threat” because these programs collect such data as the victim PC’s operating system, domain name, process logs, security applications, IP address, and security updates installed.

The remaining 60 percent, said Aladdin, gathered “commercial-value information about the end user’s browsing habits,” the traditional definition of the often noxious but rarely dangerous adware.

http://www.techweb.com/wire/security/170703179;jsessionid=KK01LHWEU4STQQSNDBCSKH0CJUMEKJVN

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Symantec: Mozilla browsers more vulnerable than IE

Posted on September 13, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

The open-source Mozilla Foundation browsers, such as the popular Firefox, have typically been seen as more secure than IE, which has suffered many security problems in the past.

Mitchell Baker, president of the foundation, said earlier this year that its browsers were fundamentally more secure than IE. She also predicted that Mozilla Foundation browsers would not face as many problems as IE, even as their market share grows.

Symantec’s Internet Security Threat Report Volume VIII contains data for the first six months of this year that may contradict this perception. According to the report, 25 vendor-confirmed vulnerabilities were disclosed for the Mozilla browsers during the first half of 2005, “the most of any browser studied,” the report’s authors stated. Eighteen of these flaws were classified as high severity.

“During the same period, 13 vendor-confirmed vulnerabilities were disclosed for IE, eight of which were high severity,” the report noted. The average severity rating of the vulnerabilities associated with both IE and Mozilla browsers in this period was classified as “high”, which Symantec defined as “resulting in a compromise of the entire system if exploited.”

The Mozilla Foundation did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Symantec reported that the gap between vulnerabilities being reported and exploit code being released has dropped to six days on average. However, it’s not clear from the report how quickly Microsoft and Mozilla released patches for their respective vulnerabilities, or how many of the vulnerabilities were targeted by hackers, though Microsoft generally releases patches only on a monthly basis.

Symantec admitted that “at the time of writing, no widespread exploitation of any browser except Microsoft Internet Explorer has occurred,” but added that it “expects this to change as alternative browsers become increasingly widely deployed.” There is one caveat: Symantec counts only those security flaws that have been confirmed by the vendor.

According to security monitoring company Secunia, there are 19 security issues that Microsoft still has to deal with for Internet Explorer, while there are only three for Firefox.

The report also highlighted a trend away from the focus of security being on “servers, firewalls, and other systems with external exposure.” Web browser vulnerabilities are becoming a preferred entry point into systems, the report stated. It also highlighted the trend of hackers operating for financial gain rather than recognition, increased potential exposure of confidential information, and a “dramatic increase in malicious code variants”.

http://news.com.com/Symantec+Mozilla+browsers+more+vulnerable+than+IE/2100-1002_3-5873273.html

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Businesses Unprepared For Disasters: AT&T Survey

Posted on September 13, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

Considering the costs involved, AT&T chief marketing officer Kathleen Flaherty commented that this kind of attitude was shortsighted. “With today’s heavy reliance on constant access to information, even a few hours of downtime can have catastrophic consequences, including huge financial losses, a tarnished reputation and lost customer goodwill,” she said in a statement.

While it might be expected that, once bitten, a company would be motivated to take corrective action, this does not seen to be the case. The study found that almost a quarter of the companies that had endured some kind of disaster remain unprepared, and less than half have updated their continuity plans for the last six months.

“The results of this survey show that companies are taking an unnecessary gamble with their futures,” IAEM executive director Elizabeth B. Armstrong said in a statement. “The cost of developing a business continuity plan and implementing a technology infrastructure to support the plan is minimal when compared to the daily financial impact once disaster strikes.”

http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=2ZL3WBYEHST0SQSNDBCSKHSCJUMEKJVN?articleID=170702762

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Cisco Making RFID Play

Posted on September 13, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

On the product front, Cisco is rolling out Application Oriented Network (AON) for RFID, a module that embeds RFID middleware functions into Cisco data center switches and branch office routers. In the data center, it offers data authentication, additional filtering and aggregation, as well as application protocol bridging, according to the statement.

Cisco’s AON technology, unveiled in June, aims to better integrate applications with the networks they ride on by reading the messages that flow between applications and basing networking decisions on their content. The vendor has also added RFID services to its lineup, including network readiness assessments, pilot services and production implementation support. Other new offerings include planning and design services around the vendor’s 2700 Wireless Location Appliance, a product line introduced earlier this year that tracks up to 1,500 Wi-Fi-enabled RFID tags over the WLAN.

http://www.networkingpipeline.com/news/170702955

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E-Mail Remains A Point Of Vulnerability

Posted on September 12, 2005December 30, 2021 by admini

Spam filtering is the major focus of any messaging security strategy.

While small companies on average spend 29.5 hours per week per 1,000 users to manage E-mail security, 9.1 hours per week per 1,000 users are spent combating unsolicited messages. Larger companies on average spend 15.2 hours per week per 1,000 users on messaging security, with 4.1 hours per week devoted to anti-spam management, according to Osterman Research. Yet, effective administration of messaging systems requires more than anti-spam management.

The research firm’s Messaging Security Market Trends 2005-2008 study finds that businesses face a myriad of messaging problems.
– Of the 115 companies surveyed, two-thirds struggle to provide adequate storage for E-messages.
– An equal number have inadequate E-mail archiving.
– Two in five say large E-mail attachments are taxing their messaging capability.
– Most alarming, nearly all surveyed companies have had their networks successfully penetrated by a virus, worm, or other form of malware through E-mail.
– Half the sites report employees sending or receiving inappropriate content electronically, while 40% have had staff view inappropriate content. E-mail bandwidth has been clogged at a third of sites because of employees oversubscribing to E-newsletters or mailing lists.
– Nearly half of all companies say employees have E-mailed or instant messaged confidential data, while nearly 20% have been infiltrated by a virus or related threat via IM.

Antivirus and anti-spam initiatives are the basis of any messaging security strategy. But content filtering for outbound E-mail and methods to monitor IM are lacking. Of the 115 companies Osterman Research surveyed, 43% don’t monitor the content of E-mails sent by employees, and three in five don’t monitor IM.

http://www.informationweek.com/showArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=KK01LHWEU4STQQSNDBCSKH0CJUMEKJVN?articleID=170702044

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