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Enterprises use freeware to beat cyber-spies

Posted on February 14, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

The AISSM report also revealed that Australian enterprises are under attack from both internal and external threats. According to the report, 57 percent of respondents said they found spyware installed on multiple computers; 22 percent revealed that they have discovered at least one illegitimately installed keylogger on their system, which Turner describes as ‘mindblowing’.

http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/security/soa/Enterprises_use_freeware_to_beat_cyber_spies/0,2000061744,39237993,00.htm

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Microsoft, RSA, Sun And Encryption

Posted on February 14, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

Active Directory is one of the most widely used technologies by Microsoft customers.

RSA Security then stepped up to advance the authentication ball with a bunch of partners that will build in its encryption software to more hardware devices, including USB, wireless and Flash memory cards.

And Sun announced its plans to integrate its Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC) in its Java System Web Server 7.0, which is a big chunk of its Java Enterprise system.

In the past few years, smart cards have not taken off in the mainstream business world, but with three major technology players making moves to advance encryption into more devices, that’s changing.

Released to a new beta in late January, IE7 now includes support for an InfoCard for users to add authentication and encryption to Web-based transactions. The roadmap includes expanded capabilities that customers will see in future versions of Windows Server, he said, which is still code-named “Longhorn.”

http://www.internetnews.com/dev-news/article.php/3585216

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Gates: End to passwords in sight

Posted on February 14, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

“We’re laying the foundation for what we need,” Gates said in a speech at the RSA Conference 2006 here. Even with the advancements, Gates said he wasn’t naive enough to think the password would go away overnight. “I don’t pretend that we are going to move away from passwords overnight, but over three or four years, for corporate systems, this change can and should happen,” he said.

Replacing passwords is part of Microsoft’s endeavor to simplify security, which Gates said is dearly needed. “We have an overly complex system today,” he said. Vista and Microsoft’s upcoming security products, such as Windows OneCare Live and Microsoft Client Protection, will make life easier for consumers, he said.

Microsoft has described InfoCard as a technology that gives users a single place to manage various authentication and payment information, in the same way a wallet holds multiple credit cards. InfoCard is Microsoft’s second try at an authentication technology after its largely failed Passport single sign-on service, unveiled in 1999. InfoCard attempts to address the complaint many critics had with Passport, which was that people’s information was managed by Microsoft instead of by the users themselves and the businesses with which they dealt. Although Microsoft has talked about InfoCard, and early versions of the InfoCard code were released to developers last year, Gates’ speech marked one of the first times Microsoft has demonstrated publicly just how it might work.

In a presentation, Microsoft showed how a consumer could use a self-generated InfoCard to log in to a car rental site and then use a separate InfoCard from a membership group to get a discount on the rental.

Internet Explorer 7 will support InfoCard, Gates announced. The technology will also be available for Windows XP, Microsoft said. InfoCard is one of several technologies Microsoft is developing for Vista, but the company is also making it available for XP.

Microsoft acknowledged that replacing passwords is something that needs to be done at the system level, but Gates said the company is also working on technologies to enable various identity systems used on the Internet to work together, something it calls the Identity Metasystem. In order to provide people with better identity verification as they do business online, Microsoft is asking for a stronger type of digital certificate, a so-called high-assurance certificate. Digital certificates are already widely used today in Web browsers to show that traffic on a Web site is encrypted and that a third party has identified the site and has vouched for its validity. But in recent years, standards of verification have slipped, undermining the sense of security implied by the padlock. That’s why Microsoft and others have called for a new type of certificate.

Microsoft on Tuesday announced the first beta of Microsoft Certificate Lifecycle Manager, a tool meant to streamline provisioning, configuration and management of digital certificates and smart cards, the company said.

Gates also touted several of the other security capabilities that will be part of Windows Vista. In a demonstration, Microsoft showed its anti-spyware technology, as well as a new mode that runs Internet Explorer in its own “sandbox” so Internet code can’t cross over into the rest of a PC.

As expected, the company on Tuesday released a second beta version of Windows AntiSpyware, now called Windows Defender. The first test version of the spyware-fighting tool has been popular, with more than 25 million downloads from Microsoft’s Web site. Windows AntiSpyware has been available in a beta version since January of last year. The program is designed to protect PCs against spyware, which is software installed on a system that’s designed to watch the computer user’s activity without his or her knowledge. Windows Defender already exists by that name in the latest preview release of Vista. Microsoft plans to ship Windows Defender as part of the operating system, it has said. At last year’s RSA Conference, Gates announced that Microsoft would deliver anti-spyware at no cost.

IE 7 also was announced at last year’s RSA event. It includes many security and privacy protection capabilities, such as mechanisms designed to combat phishing attacks, spyware and other threats. Cyberattackers have exploited security flaws and weaknesses in the current version of Microsoft’s Web browser in many attacks. A public preview of IE 7 was released in late January.

http://news.zdnet.com/2100-1009_22-6039177.html

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Cisco readies security enhancements

Posted on February 13, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

Both of these enhancements can also be combined into a Cisco security management suite.

http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/security/soa/Cisco_readies_security_enhancements/0,2000061744,39237994,00.htm

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Sun to unveil security offerings

Posted on February 13, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

“With this announcement, we’ll have more security features in our Sun Java Web Server,” said Brian Leonard, Sun’s marketing director of Web tier products. Sun Java System Web Server 7.0, with its support for ECC, is expected to be released in July, Leonard said.

The company is also expected to announce plans next week to change the way it delivers security to organisations and agencies that deal with highly sensitive information, said Chris Ratcliffe, director of Sun’s Solaris marketing. Sun plans to introduce its Solaris Trusted Extensions, which encompasses the remaining 15 percent of the security features left out in Solaris 10. He noted organisations that are mandated to use higher levels of security will likely be the ones to subscribe to the Trusted Extensions support service.

http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/Sun_to_unveil_security_offerings/0,2000061733,39237991,00.htm

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Security Staffing Survey

Posted on February 11, 2006December 30, 2021 by admini

Hiring When asked which positions were most frequently outsourced, survey respondents listed penetration testing (40 percent), data backup and recovery (23 percent) and biometrics (20 percent).

The “CSO Security Staffing Survey,” conducted by CSO magazine, was administered online in October, 2005.

Thirty-six percent of the survey base work at companies with more than10,000 employees while 37 percent are at companies with 1,000 to 9,999 employees.

When asked about annual gross sales, half (49 percent) of the respondents say they come from companies with annual gross sales of more than $10 billion and 26 percent reported annual revenue between $100 million and $999 million while 24 percent report annual gross sales of less than $100 million.

http://www.csoonline.com/csoresearch/report103.html

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