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Author: admini

New Security Intelligence Solution, EnCase® Analytics, Unveiled by Guidance Software

Posted on May 20, 2013December 30, 2021 by admini

“One of the main goals of big data security analytics is to improve operations and accelerate incident detection/response,” said Jon Oltsik, senior principal analyst at the Enterprise Strategy Group. There is a need for solutions to easily discover changes in the system, trends and patterns, and other anomalous behavior that may expose signs of risks and threats.”

With EnCase Analytics, we are leveraging this expertise to empower organizations to derive useful insights from the noise that endpoint data produces,” said Victor Limongelli, chief executive officer, Guidance Software, Inc. “Unlike other endpoint security solutions, EnCase Analytics does not rely on signatures, heuristics or indicators, but instead leverages big data analytics to draw useful connections between seemingly unrelated activities in disparate data types.” EnCase Analytics leverages data from across all your endpoints from the kernel level instead of trusting a compromised operating system, resulting in a repository of the most reliable and useful data for insights into undetected risks and threats.

Link: http://www.it-analysis.com/technology/security/news_release.php?rel=38406

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In a sea of malware, viruses make a small comeback

Posted on May 17, 2013December 30, 2021 by admini

“Although we don’t have complete data for all the aforementioned locations, we can see that 30 percent to 40 percent of computers in some of these locations do not have up-to-date real-time anti-virus software installed, compared to the worldwide average of 24 percent,” Rains wrote.

More than 8 million computers worldwide are infected with Sality, a virus that infects files with certain extensions such as “.scr” and “.exe” and can also shut down the processes and services of security software, he wrote.

To infect computers, Sality has used a vulnerability that was also targeted by Stuxnet, the malware designed to wreck Siemens equipment used by Iran in its nuclear fuel refinement program.

Link: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9239326/In_a_sea_of_malware_viruses_make_a_small_comeback?source=CTWNLE_nlt_dailyam_2013-05-17

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DHS Eyes Sharing Zero-Day Intelligence With Businesses

Posted on May 16, 2013December 30, 2021 by admini

The DHS pitch: We’ll share intelligence gleaned from the U.S. government’s vast stockpile of zero-day vulnerabilities — purchased from bug hunters and resellers — to help block zero-day threats. “It is a way to share information about known vulnerabilities that may not be commonly available,” Homeland Security secretary Janet Napolitano said Wednesday at the Reuters Cybersecurity Summit in Washington, D.C., reported Reuters. The DHS proposal is a continuation of the February 2013 executive order and related presidential policy directive issued by President Obama, which created a public-private cyber-threat information sharing regime, as well as voluntary private sector cybersecurity standards.

The executive order expanded the Enhanced Cybersecurity Services program — formerly known as the Defense Industrial Base pilot — to share threat information, including classified intelligence, with defense contractors, telecommunications and other critical-infrastructure firms that have appropriate security clearances.

But the suggestion has drawn the ire of privacy and civil rights groups, which object to giving blanket immunity to any business that shares customer and employee information — potentially including full texts of all emails sent and received via business networks — with intelligence agencies.

Outsourcing zero-day-vulnerability scanning to a private business, however, would seem to obviate related privacy concerns, since network providers already scan their customers’ network traffic for some signs of attack.

The offer of shared threat intelligence is a crucial incentive for getting private businesses to agree to participate in the government’s cybersecurity program, which is designed in large measure to better secure the critical infrastructure, which is largely owned by private businesses.

To date, the large sums of money on offer for buying zero-day vulnerabilities have seen the bug-buying restricted to organizations, criminal gangs or governments with deep enough pockets, and presumably a need to put the vulnerabilities to use.

Furthermore, some information security experts have warned that the move to share threat intelligence gathered by the NSA and other agencies could further bolster the bug vulnerability marketplace and potentially direct tax dollars to anti-U.S. hackers who are expert bug hunters, as opposed to spending that money on defense.

“If the U.S. government knows of a vulnerability that can be exploited, under normal circumstances, its first obligation is to tell U.S. users,” former White House cybersecurity advisor Richard Clarke told Reuters.

“NSA, CIA and military are now #1 buyers of exploits, while DHS, which is responsible for cyber defense, has lost most of its top officials,” said Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist and senior policy analyst for the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, via Twitter.

Link: http://www.informationweek.com/security/vulnerabilities/dhs-eyes-sharing-zero-day-intelligence-w/240154972?queryText=ThreatGrid

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New Mac spyware found in the Oslo Freedom Forum

Posted on May 16, 2013December 30, 2021 by admini

This bit of malware is somewhat unique in that it is signed with what appears to be a valid Apple Developer ID associated with the name Rajender Kumar.

Managing this malware for now involves simply checking one’s log-in items (select your username in the Users & Groups system preferences and click the Login Items tab) and removing the macs.app program if present to prevent it from being launched when you log in. Locating and removing the macs.app program file from your computer is also advised; this could be in the Downloads folder, the home directory, or in the Applications folder at the root of the drive.

Link: http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13727_7-57584804-263/new-mac-spyware-found-in-the-oslo-freedom-forum/

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DDoS Attack Bandwidth Jumps 718%

Posted on May 15, 2013December 30, 2021 by admini

Given that situation, it’s no surprise that China, the United States and Germany — which all sport a relatively large Internet infrastructure — are also tops for DDoS attack origin. But Prolexic’s report said it’s odd that Iran, which has a very small Internet architecture by comparison, should be the source of so many attacks.

As DDoS attack sizes increase, so do fears of an Armageddon scenario, in which the attack not only disrupts a targeted site, but every site or service provider in between. According to Prolexic’s report, the largest single attack it’s mitigated to date occurred in March, when an “enterprise customer” was hit with an attack that peaked at 130 Gbps. While that wasn’t equal to the 300 Gbps attack experienced by Spamhaus, it still represents well more than most businesses can handle, unless they work with their service provider or third parties to build a better DDoS mitigation defense.

“There are a number of DDoS mitigation technologies out there, and we see organizations that are deploying the technologies in their own infrastructure and in their own environments,” as well as working with service providers, said Chris Novak, managing principal of the RISK Team at Verizon Enterprise Solutions, speaking recently by phone.

Link: http://www.informationweek.com/security/attacks/ddos-attack-bandwidth-jumps-718/240153084?cid=RSSfeed_IWK_security

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Researchers develop industrial systems that watch for breaches

Posted on May 15, 2013December 30, 2021 by admini

Mo-Yuen Chow, co-author of the research and a professor of electrical and computer engineering, said the concept was like a “community watch,” where neighbors watch each other’s property for burglaries.

SCADA and PLC systems are used in industries comprising the nation’s critical infrastructure (CI), which includes power generation facilities, oil and gas pipelines, electric power transmitters and defense manufacturing.

Securing the nation’s critical infrastructure is difficult because most of the electronics and machinery was built before the Internet evolved as a networking protocol in controlling systems. In tackling the problem, NCSU researchers have developed an algorithm that can be deployed in any networked device, either in software or as firmware in a microcontroller.

The technology would augment traditional security systems used today, such as communication encryption and access controls, said Wente Zeng, a doctoral student and co-author of the research.

The researchers plan to present their paper (PDF), entitled “Convergence and Recovery Analysis of the Secure Distributed Control Methodology for D-NCS,” at the IEEE International Symposium on Industrial Electronics being held May 27-31 in Taipei, Taiwan.

Link: http://www.csoonline.com/article/733477/researchers-develop-industrial-systems-that-watch-for-breaches

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