Airport Internet terminals open to infection |
- Airport Internet terminals open to infection
- Building secure software using fuzzing and static code analysis
- 25% of new worms are designed to spread through USB devices
- Major fake anti-virus attack spreading
- Infected flash drive blamed for US military breach
- Secure wireless access points from SonicWALL
Airport Internet terminals open to infection Posted: 26 Aug 2010 10:17 AM PDT Maybe you're already aware of the dangers that public terminals can present to you or your computer. About two months ago, we had the instance of a photo kiosk that was infecting USB drives of people ... |
Building secure software using fuzzing and static code analysis Posted: 26 Aug 2010 07:00 AM PDT The increased complexity of new technologies and faster software release cycles are making traditional reactive security solutions ineffective. Instead, more adaptable, preemptive product security tes... |
25% of new worms are designed to spread through USB devices Posted: 26 Aug 2010 06:10 AM PDT In 2010, 25 percent of new worms have been specifically designed to spread through USB storage devices connected to computers, according to PandaLabs. These types of threats can copy themselves to any... |
Major fake anti-virus attack spreading Posted: 26 Aug 2010 04:16 AM PDT Computer users should be cautious in the wake of a widespread spam campaign designed to infect users with fake anti-virus products. If recipients open HTML files attached to the spam emails, their ... |
Infected flash drive blamed for US military breach Posted: 26 Aug 2010 01:34 AM PDT The most significant computer systems' breach in U.S. military history dates back to 2008, when malicious code contained in a flash drive infected a laptop of a military official posted in the Middle ... |
Secure wireless access points from SonicWALL Posted: 25 Aug 2010 09:09 PM PDT SonicWALL released two new secure wireless access points the SonicPoint-Ni and SonicPoint-Ne. Designed for enterprises, SMBs and distributed wireless networks, the new devices are 802.11n compliant ... |
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