CA$HFLOW
Best hacker alive.
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Amateur with short hair loves a BBC
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Phishing gang nabbed after woman robbed of £1 million life savings
The Met's Police Central e-crime Unit (PCeU) has arrested 14 people in connection with an extraordinary phishing attack that
robbed a British woman of her APS1 million ($1.58 million) life savings.
Many of the 12 men and 2 women detained in London and the West Midlands are accused of acting as 'mules' who helped launder the siphoned funds from the woman and other victims in return for payouts of between APS9,000 to APS75,000 each.
According to the PCeU, much of the stolen money was spent by the suspects in only three days during the Christmas period on "items ranging from cheeseburgers to high-end computers and even gold bars."
More @ networkworld.com/news/2012/031912-phishing-gang-nabbed-after-woman-257421.html
Stolen encryption key the source of compromised certificate problem, Symantec says
When Kaspersky Lab last week spotted code-signed Trojan malware dubbed Mediyes that had been signed with a digital certificate
owned by Swiss firm Conpavi AG and issued by Symantec, it touched off a hunt to determine the source of the problem.
BACKGROUND: Kaspersky Lab spots malware signed with digital certificate
"The private key for Conpavi was exposed," says Quentin Liu, senior director of engineering at the Symantec division. "Someone got hold of the private key." For this type of digital certificate, the private key is held by the certificate owner, in this case, Conpavi. Whether the private encryption key was stolen by an insider at Conpavi or outside attacker isn't known. But the incident points out the risks associated with private encryption keys for this type of digital certificate and the need to safeguard them.
More @ networkworld.com/news/2012/031912-symantec-stolen-key-257407.html
Soon after release, latest iPad model is jailbroken
Hackers claimed to have figured out a way to bypass Apple's technical restrictions and install unauthorized applications on
the company's latest iPad upon its release last Friday.
THE VERDICT: New iPad wins rave reviews
IN PICTURES: iPad mania around the world
There are three different methods to jailbreak the latest Apple iOS 5.1 software, and videos and screenshots posted over the weekend showed the hacks, according to the Dev-Team, which developed the first jailbreak tool.
More @ networkworld.com/news/2012/031912-soon-after-release-latest-ipad-257400.html
Security Wonks Tussle Over Tolly Test
Security experts have been debating for years the merits of whitelists
versus blacklists in securing an enterprise, and last week the debate
continued to rage with the release of some test results from the Tolly
Group. The group tested three endpoint protection programs: McAfee
Endpoint Protection Suite, Symantec Endpoint Protection 12.1 and Parity
Suite 6.0 from Bit9, which also sponsored the tests.
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74662.html
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74662.html
Invasion of Privacy Court Ruling Could Be a Game-Changer
The Court of Appeal for Ontario recently considered whether there was a cause of action for the invasion of personal privacy in Jones v.Tsige.
The case involved two bank employees, Sandra Jones and Winne Tsige, who
worked at two different branches of the same bank. Over the course of
four years, the respondent had used her work computer to secretly access
the appellant's banking records.
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74650.html
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74650.html
Dell Bolsters Security Portfolio With SonicWall Buy
Dell is acquiring network-security and data-protection tool provider
SonicWall for an estimated $1 billion to $1.5 billion. This is the
latest in a series of acquisitions Dell has made in recent months. It
has acquired Force 10, Perot Systems and SecureWorks. All of these
companies focus on different areas: Perot Systems is a consultant;
SecureWorks offers managed security services. The addition of SonicWall
rounds out Dell's portfolio.
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74637.html
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74637.html
Google's New Privacy Policy vs. the World
Even before Google launched its new privacy policy earlier this month,
consolidating separate privacy policies for more than 60 applications,
legal issues had surfaced. Now, attorneys general from more than 31
States have accused Google of violating privacy laws because of
complaints from users that they were finding ads are popping up on
YouTube just after they did a search on Google Maps about the same
subject.
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74633.html
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74633.html
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Your Employees May Be Causing That Data Drip, Drip, Drip You're Hearing
Nearly 80 percent of organizations have experienced a data breach in the
last two years due to employee negligence or maliciousness. That was
one of the findings in a study released last week by the Ponemon
Institute and sponsored by antivirus software maker Trend Micro.
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74615.html
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74615.html
Pew Study: All Search Engines Being Equally Intrusive, Google's the Best
There is no question that Google is the dominant player in the search
engine arena, and a new survey released Friday by the Pew Internet &
American Life Project found that 83 percent of U.S. search engine users
rated Google as their preferred search engine, despite concerns about
the company's data-collection and advertising practices.
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74608.html
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74608.html
No Cloud Apps at Your Company? Don't Just Blame IT
Corporate concerns about potential Internet security risks have
skyrocketed, not only because of Facebook, Twitter and other popular
social networking tools, but also as a result of the rising unilateral
adoption of Software as a Service and other cloud services by business
end-users without the authorization of corporate IT.
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74602.html
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74602.html
The Privacy Shell Game, Part 2
The White House has proposed a consumer privacy bill of rights, a step
that could result in new laws regarding what companies can do with
information about their online customers and users. Privacy advocates
are cautiously optimistic, though some fear the result will be laws
rendered toothless by lobbyists. Other critics already see problems in
the way the proposal is structured.
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74603.html
More @ technewsworld.com/story/74603.html
Wrong paperwork used to seize Megaupload property, judge says
An order granted to law enforcement allowing them to seize luxury cars and other personal effects from the estate of Megaupload
founder Kim Dotcom is invalid, a judge in New Zealand ruled on Friday.
A police commissioner applied for the wrong type of seizure order, requested by the U.S., which now is "null and void and has no legal effect," Judge Judith Potter ruled.
The ruling means Dotcom has a chance to recover some of the items, which reportedly included a Rolls Royce and a pink Cadillac, seized during his Jan. 20 arrest at his mansion outside Auckland. It was unclear on Monday the next step Dotcom would have to take to get his property returned, and his attorneys could not immediately be reached.
Dotcom, 38, faces extradition to the U.S. on various copyright infringement and money laundering charges relating to his website Megaupload, a file-sharing and storage website, which was shutdown in January.
More @ networkworld.com/news/2012/031912-wrong-paperwork-used-to-seize-257399.html
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