Symantec researchers have determined that the Milicenso trojan (also known as the Printer Bomb) is downloaded by an .htaccess redirection web attack that has infected at least 4,000 websites.
Most security professionals predict breaches will increase this year
A disturbing 93% of IT security professionals believe that data breaches will increase this year, according to nCircle’s 2012 Information Security and Compliance Trend study.
Assume everyone is infected, EU agency advises banks
The EU’s cybersecurity agency is recommending that banks should assume that all customers’ PCs are infected and institute security measures based on that assumption.
How to get a Google Reward – go public
A loophole in Google Apps was remarkably simple, found by Indian blogger Saket Jajodia, and reported to and rapidly closed by Google. But getting recognition for the discovery was less easy.
Fog Computing; or catching the insider the DARPA way
The insider threat is generally acknowledged to be a serious threat to data security. For companies it can lead to the loss of IP; for governments, the loss of state secrets. Fog Computing is a new approach to detecting and preventing that threat.
Android Malware Samples Predicted at 250,000 for 2012
Trend Micro has provided details on the Android threat: the volume of malware; the types of malware; specific families and what they do.
New variant of the police scareware virus emerges
The police virus continues to evolve, from scareware to ransomware – and a new version that can be described as very scary ware.
Protecting US secrets costs taxpayers big bucks
The cost to protect US government secrets reached more than $11 billion in fiscal year (FY) 2011, up 12% from FY 2010 and more than double the cost in FY 2001, according to a report by the National Archives.
Defense organizations to ramp up cybersecurity spending
Global defense organizations are expected to increase their cybersecurity budgets by an average of 6% over the next 12 months, according to a report by ICD Research and Strategic Defence Intelligence.
Indian Navy secrets stolen and sent to China
Computers in India’s primary eastern seafront naval establishment at Visakhapatnam were reportedly infected with spyware that sent classified information to IP addresses in China.