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- Botnet attacks military systems
- Privacy advocates: Court posting personal data in documents
- News: Groups warn travelers to limit laptop data
- News: U.S. gov't pushes cybersecurity at con
- Resist the latest business phishes
- 100 e-mail bouncebacks? You've been backscattered.
- Forrester: IT must prove need for disaster recovery tools
- Mozilla Messaging patches Thunderbird bugs
- Data-loss prevention players link products
- Yahoo uses McAfee SiteAdvisor to filter evil Web sites
- With Determina, VMware drops fortress mentality
- BlackBerry gets message security, archiving
- Cisco Q3 report card: Lots of A's and B's
- Misbehaving software mistaken for data breach
- Belgium accuses China of cyberattacks
- AT&T demos disaster preparedness
- Google takes Street View snaps in Paris; lawsuits may follow
- HSBC lost server with customer data
- Spy bots that share information being built for military
- Facebook, states agree to boost efforts to protect children
- NAC is about more than security at UNC
- The case of the tampered USBs
- Is it time to abandon credit card payments and go back to cash?
- U.K. businesses lose data at least once a month
- Determining Microsoft Jet Database Engine vulnerability
- Spammers handed record $234 million fine - eat that
- News: Admins warned of brute-force SSH attacks
- News: Patches pose significant risk, researchers say
- EU raises privacy issue for Google Street View
- Non-tech criminals can now rent-a-botnet
- Another cheap mini-portable...competition rocks
- Tools circulate that crack Debian, Ubuntu keys
- Former Microsoft manager offers fix for XP SP3 'endless reboot'
- News: Legal experts wary of MySpace hacking charges
- News: Groups warn travelers to limit laptop data
- Strategies for keeping disaster recovery on target
- NASA moves to save computers from swarming ants
- Five IRS employees charged with snooping at tax records
- 38 in US, Romania charged in phishing schemes
- Facebook CEO wants to talk with Google on Friend Connect
- Bleak prospects for privacy
- Identity overload: complacency breeding fraudster paradise
- Mauritius gets computer emergency response team
- ING Direct Bank offers free antiphishing software
- YouTube declines request to remove terrorist-produced videos
- Feds encrypt 800,000 laptops; 1.2 million to go
- Speed is of essence for next-generation Symantec products
- Toshiba notebook protects itself with faces
- Most retailer breaches are not disclosed, Gartner says
- TJX staffer sacked after talking about security problems
- Thieves troll for execs with new Tax Court phish scam
- RIM says it can't provide e-mail interception in India
- Deutsche Telekom seeks investigation of call data abuse
- Yahoo files lawsuit against lottery scammers
- EU security agency wants social network scrutiny
- While shopping at electronics superstores
- New Adobe flaw being used in attacks, says Symantec
- SonicWALL launches the NSA 2400
- FTC halts pretexting operation connected to HP
- Six hours to hack the FBI
- HP beefs up its application-security software
- Ad software maker likely violates copyright
- Antispam appliance vendor Barracuda wants to buy Sourcefire
- Domain name record altered to hack Comcast.net
- Canadian law clinic files privacy complaint against Facebook
- Researchers breach Microsoft's CardSpace ID technology
- News: Hired gun blamed for business outage
- News: Admins warned of brute-force SSH attacks
- Police to use mobile fingerprinting by 2009
- Sourcefire says no to Barracuda's takeover bid
- RIM reportedly gets ultimatum over Indian BlackBerry service
- Bank loses tapes with data on 4.5M clients
- Microsoft: CardSpace attack works but was too rigged
- Smartphones 'bigger security risk' than laptops
- Trend Micro bolsters security package
- Sci-fi writers: New tech will bring more security challenges
- Discovery slashes quantum cryptography costs
- TransUnion offers free credit monitoring to 150 million
- Hong Kong, China Web domains cited as "most dangerous"
- Microsoft clarifies XP SP 3 Flash issue
- McAfee names '.hk' world's most dangerous domain
- Hong Kong scam site targets Chinese residents in UK
- Researchers say notification laws not lowering ID theft
- Webroot woos SMBs with online security
- Spear-phishing attacks have hooked 15,000, says Verisign
- 6 burning questions about network security
- Leaked report details secret ad software trials in UK
- Groups call for investigation of ISP ad targeting
- Surprise ARP attack draws attention
- Bust-out schemes are a fraud to make you go bust
- McAfee extends enterprise antivirus line
- Akihabara killer chronicled massacre plans online
- McAfee extends enterprise antivirus line
- News: Boycott spotlights antivirus testing issues
- News: Legal experts wary of MySpace hacking charges
- Websense upgrades Web gateway software
- Managing trust in our digital world
- A question of trust and identity
- Opera integrates antiphishing system
- Most data breaches discovered too late, study says
- Perimeter buys Edgeos to boost security offerings
- Can you stop the iPhone now, IT?
- New version of OpenOffice.org fixes critical bug
- US Congressmen accuse China of hacking their computers
- Laptop safety questions
- Spam-free blog search goes public
- U.S. FTC settles with marketers of 'free' software CDs
- AT&T manager on laptop loss: 'It is pathetic'
- Weak evidence links congressmen's cyber-attacks to China
- British hacker faces extradition hearing next week
- News: Ransomware resisting crypto cracking efforts
- Trend Micro: Barracuda suit not about open source
- China quake site hacker caught
- Unpredictable IT means unreliable business, survey says
- Senate passes VoIP emergency-dialing bill
- Compression lets attackers tap VoIP calls
- Vote on Swedish bugging bill delayed
- A misconfigured laptop, a wrecked life
- Trend Micro retools antimalware software
- Security firm finds server with health-care data
- Teens charged with loading spyware, changing grades
- Firefox 3 vulnerability found
- FaceTime security program locks out MySpace applets
- Press takes on the hard drive
- Debt collectors mining your secrets
- Data shuffling: A safer way to analyze confidential data?
- Security vendors report 'critical' Trojan exploit for Mac
- Desktop virtualization gets military-grade security
- Patch-blocking bug also stymies Microsoft's WSUS
- Microsoft security fix clobbers 2 million password stealers
- Marketers mucking up data-privacy efforts
- Are smartphone viruses really a threat to your network?
- Preventing data breaches not a technology issue
- Most corporate networks vulnerable to cyberattacks
- Orchestria updates data leak prevention suite
- CNET employees notified after data breach
- Communal security?
- Proofpoint acquires Fortiva
- Yahoo Mail vulnerability discovered, fixed, company says
- Seven steps to disaster-recovery planning
- Senators question border laptop searches
- Yahoo fixes e-mail cross-site scripting flaw
- News: Breach-notification laws not working?
- News: Boycott spotlights antivirus testing issues
- Cleaning Chinese malware sites harder than in U.S.
- Malware, spam, botnets growing faster than ever before
- Risk now the target with identity management
- Privacy? Hah!
- Senate delays vote on surveillance bill until July
- Cisco, IBM, Intel, Juniper and Microsoft fight cyber terror together
- The ARDAgent security hole: What you need to know
- Summertime security: No letup for IT
- Microsoft repairs PCs crippled by XP SP3 update
- EIQ Networks offers unique presentation features, but underlying SIEM needs some impr
- TriGeo's SIM is upgraded with higher-end features
- F-Secure warns against new, efficient malware
- Marshal automates e-mail encryption
- Laptops lost like hot cakes at US airports
- Study: Unpatched Web browsers prevalent on the Internet
- Start-up nexTier debuts data-leak prevention appliance
- Trojan lurks, waiting to steal admin passwords
- Report: Tech giants forming 'patent troll' alliance
- News: Web surfers, it's time to patch
- News: Ransomware resisting crypto cracking efforts
- ACLU, EFF sue US gov't over mobile phone tracking
- Microsoft to sell Office 'value pack' for $70 per year
- Apple patches 25 Mac OS X security vulnerabilities
- Google gives away free Web-application security scanner
- Buffalo ships low-cost encryption drive
- Google bows to pressure, adds 'Privacy' link to home page
- Lithuania: Attacks focused on hosting company
- AVG fixes antivirus software skewing Web site statistics
- ConSentry CEO talks up security issues
- Adware company refines opt-out, notification technology
- Storm botnet stages Fourth of July attacks
- News: Alliance forms to fix DNS poisoning flaw
- News: Breach-notification laws not working?
- News: Senate amends FISA, allows immunity
- News: Web surfers, it's time to patch
- Microsoft fixes month-old WSUS patch snafu
- Thales buys nCipher for $100 million
- SMS death threat scam arrives down under
- iPhone 2.0 includes critical security fixes
- Should 'spam king' Soloway pay the price for worse?
- CCTV camera identifies people by race
- Ex-Bear Stearns CISO takes aim at compliance issues
- Weight-loss supplement dealer settles spam charges
- Misdirected disappointment over fax inaction
- Lawmakers question another ISP about NebuAd service
- Activists raise awareness over targeted advertising
- Losses likely to rise from latest Romanian crime ring
- Biggest security threats are from inside: survey
- Study finds huge rise in malware this year
- New worm transcodes MP3s to try to infect PCs
- How to Protect Your Network from Rogue IT Employees
- Firefox update fixes Mac security issue
- Open source software a security risk, study claims
- Kaspersky Lab's Malaysian Web site hacked
- Kaspersky says hacking attack did no damage
- IPNetSentryX 1.6.5
- Romanian admits to phishing, could face five years
- Design flaws, besides vulnerabilities, hurt banking sites
- News: E-Gold pleads guilty to money laundering
- News: Alliance forms to fix DNS poisoning flaw
- Sun offering support for OpenSSO
- Attack code released for new DNS attack
- 802.11n support added to wireless intrusion defense
- It's a crime-filled week in IT land
- Start-up BRS to offer video-analytics security tool
- HP StorageWorks sets the bar for iSCSI SAN server security
- Protecting patient records
- ClamXav 1.1
- Mid-year security report: Web sites, open source, social networking at risk
- Motorola plans to buy AirDefense
- The tale of two busted spammers
- Hotels to spy on Olympics guests, says US senator
- FAQ: The DNS bug and you
- News: Poisoned DNS servers pop up as ISPs patch
- News: Senate amends FISA, allows immunity
- What are critical issues with VoIP service?
- U.K.: Web giants should screen user-generated content
- China hits back at U.S. senator's spying claims
- Apple finally patches dangerous DNS flaw
- Busch alerts N.H. residents: Stolen laptop had personal data
- Smaller ISPs at risk to DNS flaw
- Start-up Purewire offers managed security service for Web users
- Experts: Apple servers still vulnerable to DNS threats
- What you don't know about security can hurt you
- Juniper consolidates network management software
- News: Gov't charges alleged TJX credit-card thieves
- News: E-Gold pleads guilty to money laundering
- UK to respond to EU soon regarding targeted ad system
- Top China Web sites join to fight Olympic piracy
- Spammers leverage interest in Olympics
- SSL VPNs might not be as secure as you think
- News: Researchers race to zero in record time
- News: Poisoned DNS servers pop up as ISPs patch
- AOL phisher gets seven-year sentence
- Dutch police, FBI rein in large botnet
- Peer-to-peer client uTorrent fixes serious vulnerability
- Torvalds: Fed up with the 'security circus'
- Anti-Georgia spammers building new botnet
- Check Point goes virtual with VPN-1
- A hopefully terminal delay in enhanced advertising
- KidsGoGoGo 12.6
- Aussie security company set to be bought by Symantec
- Virtualizing network security
- Report: Princeton Review publishes sensitive data online
- Online encyclopedia lists internal network security threats
- DeviceLock counters USB stick menace with alliance
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