Facebook set to change its privacy policy again |
- Facebook set to change its privacy policy again
- Flash-based rogue AV targets users
- Securing SharePoint
- Megaupload users targeted with extortion scheme
- Call center employees are selling user information
- Plan to reduce botnets launched
- Ghost in the Wires
Facebook set to change its privacy policy again Posted: 23 Mar 2012 08:37 AM PDT On March 15, Facebook published a draft of the changes that it plans to make to its Statement of Rights and Responsibilities, and asked users to comment on them. Among the most important proposed... |
Flash-based rogue AV targets users Posted: 23 Mar 2012 07:11 AM PDT The business of pushing rogue AV software onto unsuspecting users is quite lucrative, so it's no wonder that cyber crooks are still doing it. But while most of the time users are saddled with scar... |
Posted: 23 Mar 2012 06:12 AM PDT Microsoft SharePoint enables information sharing and report publishing. It also provides a search facility for users to find content. The problem is that, all too easily, any one can find things they ... |
Megaupload users targeted with extortion scheme Posted: 23 Mar 2012 05:48 AM PDT The recent shutdown of the Megaupload file hosting service by the US authorities is being actively exploited by cyber crooks who are attempting to extort money from the service's users, warns TorrentF... |
Call center employees are selling user information Posted: 23 Mar 2012 04:09 AM PDT Indian call center employees sell confidential data belonging to users for as little as $0.03, reports the Daily Mail. According to the news outlet, reporters from The Sunday Times have gone under... |
Plan to reduce botnets launched Posted: 22 Mar 2012 09:21 PM PDT More than one in ten U.S. computers are infected by difficult-to-detect bots, which botmasters can use for anything from sending spam, to eavesdropping on network traffic, to stealing user passwords. ... |
Posted: 22 Mar 2012 09:01 PM PDT Kevin Mitnick accessed computers and networks at the world's biggest companies - and however fast the authorities were, Mitnick was faster, sprinting through phone switches, computer systems, and cell... |
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