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June 24, 2008

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July 03, 2008

Information Security Management: The Basics

Industry View: Web Application Security Today - Are We All Insane?

Ignore Malware? Some Leaders Imply Yes

Chinese bloggers evade great firewall

HMRC blunder leads to further private data leak

Reports reveal poor security practices behind data losses

Thieves steal millions from Citibank customers

Trojans stop play for web gamers

Google open sources RatProxy security tool

IBM Develops Audio-masking Technology

ATO admits callers are 'chopped off'

E-security review to probe broadband network

Stolen: Google's employee records

Microsoft trumpets security additions in upcoming IE8

Mozilla patches 13 bugs in Firefox 2

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DISCLAIMER: Logging other people's keystrokes or breaking into other people's computer without their permission can be considered illegal by the courts of many countries. The monitoring software reviewed here is ONLY for authorized system administrators and/or owners of computers. We assume no liability and are not responsible for any misuse or damage caused by the keylogging software. The end user of this software is obliged to obey all applicable local, state, federal and other laws in his country of residence.

May 15, 2008

Non-tech criminals can now rent-a-botnet

Online fraudsters that aren't highly skilled in the arts of cybercrime can now rent a service that offers an all-in-one hosting server with a built-in Zeus Trojan administration panel and infecting tools, allowing them to create their own botnet.

EMC's security division, the RSA Anti-Fraud Command Centre (AFCC), cited an increase in the use of the Zeus Trojan in attacks against financial institutions in its April online fraud report, claiming the Trojan is "extremely user friendly and easy to operate".

"Fraudsters who execute Zeus attacks simply need to take control of a compromised server or have their own back-end servers; once they have a server in place, they merely need to install the Zeus administration panel, create a user name and password, and start launching their attacks," the report stated.

But the AFCC recently traced a new service that does all of the above for would be botnet barons. The service offers access to a "bullet-proof hosting server with a built-in Zeus Trojan administration panel and infection tools...the service includes all of the required stages in a single package, meaning that all the fraudster now has to do is pay for the service, access the newly hired Zeus Trojan server, create infection points, and start collecting data".

RSA's banking and finance specialist, Geoff Noble, said that those offering the Zeus package are mirroring what legitimate security vendors are offering -- security-as-a-service -- but in their case they are slinging malware-as-a-service.

"Phase one of online threats was stealing credit card numbers, buying stuff on the Internet and selling it somewhere else to make a profit. Phase two is this grabbing of user names and passwords online, phase two 'b' is productizing that solution, and phase 2 'c' is offering that solution as a service," Noble said.

"What Zeus means is that you are buying a service with traditional software support and maintenance, so you can go about your business without updating and patching."

RSA said that the exploit package allows fraudsters to easily infect users and grow a botnet of compromised machines, and boasts an easy to use Web hosting control panel that can be used by virtually anyone.

"The bottom line is that with such services, creating the infrastructure for Zeus attacks and actually implementing these attacks is now easier than ever before", the report said.

"It makes it markedly easier because you don't need to bring together the three components. The challenge still remains -- how to get the cash out -- and that will likely be the constriction point getting in the [fraudsters] way; it will be a lot easier to do on the attack front but the cash still needs to come out of the channel," Noble said.

Victims receiving e-mails at home or work offering amazing deals to become the local financial outpost for a multinational company is just one of the ways the fraudsters are getting the cash out.

"People still get sucked into that, and that's one of the variants of getting the cash out. The fact that it's too good to be true doesn't always sink into everyone and people still become mules. And we're seeing a lot more specific approaches to people to become mules in tandem with the ease of use for non-tech spooks and fraudsters," he said.

The Zeus Trojan is designed to perform advanced key logging when infected users access specific Web pages. The information it collects is encrypted when it is sent to the collection point, and can be communicated over SSL encryption.

The monthly AFCC report found that U.S. banks continued to be the dominant target of cybercriminals with 62 percent of attacks, followed by the U.K. with 11 percent. Australia and New Zealand made it into the list for the second month running as phishing in the Asia-Pacific region continues to grow.

The U.S. also topped AFCC's April list of top hosting countries, with 51 percent of phishing attacks originating from there -- a 12 percent decrease from the previous month. China came in second position with 19 percent of attacks, while Australia was responsible for 2 percent of threats.


Source: InfoWorld




All news for July 03, 2008:
14:06Information Security Management: The Basics
14:06Industry View: Web Application Security Today - Are We All Insane?
14:04Ignore Malware? Some Leaders Imply Yes
14:02Chinese bloggers evade great firewall
13:01HMRC blunder leads to further private data leak
12:54Reports reveal poor security practices behind data losses
12:53Thieves steal millions from Citibank customers
12:51Trojans stop play for web gamers
12:50Google open sources RatProxy security tool
12:48IBM Develops Audio-masking Technology
12:40ATO admits callers are 'chopped off'
12:39E-security review to probe broadband network
12:37Stolen: Google's employee records
12:33Microsoft trumpets security additions in upcoming IE8
12:32Mozilla patches 13 bugs in Firefox 2

All news for July 02, 2008:
16:50Start-up nexTier debuts data-leak prevention appliance
16:49ACLU, EFF sue US gov't over mobile phone tracking
16:47UK scientists demo graphic passwords
16:46SecureWorks unmasks the Coreflood Trojan
16:45Web threats hit 12-month high
16:43Malware growth slowing, say experts
16:42World of Warcraft Trojan spreads from Asia
16:42Hackers hit Sony PS3 website
16:41SMEs failing at IT security
16:37Hacking Tools: A New Version of BackTrack Helps Ethical Hackers
16:36Hands On: 12 Quick Hacks for Firefox 3
16:35Swedish Data Inspection Protects Messy Apartment Dwellers
16:06DIAC security threatened by flood of contractors
16:02Lords questions gov't over web-data retention laws
16:00Barclays gives online users free Kaspersky software
16:00Report: Outdated browsers put 637m users at risk
15:57Trojan lurks, waiting to steal admin passwords
15:57Unstructured data at risk in most firms, survey finds
15:55Microsoft scrutinizes WSUS patch snafu
15:53Apple OS update fixes Adobe corruption bug



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