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September 24, 2008

New version of PC Activity Monitor Pro (PC Acme Pro) added!

World news

October 10, 2008

Parity provides free online identity management

High-tech bank robbers phone it in

Spread security risks with diversity

Corporate data loss not down to hackers

First quantum encrypted network goes live

Apple Posts Security Update 2008-007

NT hacker blames 'segregation'

ASIC counter-spy to be a tough search

Scotland tightens security for mobile health-data

Home Office publishes data-sharing guidance

EDS loses unencrypted armed-forces data

Data-center security tools to not overlook

Microsoft promises huge patch day next week

Firefox add-on blocks 'clickjacking' attacks

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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 16, 2008

DNS trouble knocks NSA off Internet

A server problem at the U.S. National Security Agency has knocked the secretive intelligence agency off the Internet.

The nsa.gov Web site was unresponsive at 7 a.m. Pacific time Thursday and continued to be unavailable throughout the morning for Internet users.

The problem was resolved at around 11 a.m. Pacific time, according to Web site measurement company Netcraft.

The Web site was unreachable because of a problem with the NSA's DNS servers, said Danny McPherson, chief research officer with Arbor Networks. DNS servers are used to translate things like the Web addresses typed into machine-readable Internet Protocol addresses that computers use to find each other on the Internet.

The agency's two authoritative DNS servers were unreachable Thursday morning, McPherson said.

Because this DNS information is sometimes cached by Internet service providers, the NSA would still be temporarily reachable by some users, but unless the problem is fixed, NSA servers will be knocked completely off-line. That means that e-mail sent to the agency will not be delivered, and in some cases, e-mail being sent by the NSA would not get through.

"We are aware of the situation, and our techs are working on it," a NSA spokeswoman said at 9:45 a.m. PT. She declined to identify herself.

A similar DNS problem knocked Youtube.com off-line in early May.

There are three possible reasons the DNS server was knocked off-line, McPherson said. "It's either an internal routing problem of some sort on their side or they've messed up some firewall or ACL [access control list] policy," he said. "Or they've taken their servers off-line because something happened."

That "something else" could be a technical glitch or a hacking incident, McPherson said.

In fact, the NSA has made some basic security mistakes with its DNS servers, according to McPherson. The NSA should have hosted its two authoritative DNS servers on different machines, so that if a technical glitch knocked one of the servers off-line, the other would still be reachable. Compounding problems is the fact that the DNS servers are hosted on a machine that is also being used as a Web server for the NSA's National Computer Security Center.

"Say there was some Apache or Windows vulnerability and hackers controlled that server, they would now own the DNS server for nsa.gov," he said. "That really surprised me. I wouldn't think that these guys would do something like that."

The NSA is responsible for analysis of foreign communications, but it is also charged with helping protect the U.S. government against cyber attacks, so the outage is an embarrassment for the agency.

"I am certain that someone's going to send an e-mail at some point that's not going to get through," McPherson said. "If it's related to national security and it's not getting through, then as a U.S. citizen, that concerns me."

Anders Lotsson with Computer Sweden contributed to this report.


Source: InfoWorld




All news for October 10, 2008:
13:57Parity provides free online identity management
13:56High-tech bank robbers phone it in
13:56Spread security risks with diversity
13:54Corporate data loss not down to hackers
13:53First quantum encrypted network goes live
13:51Apple Posts Security Update 2008-007
13:50NT hacker blames 'segregation'
13:49ASIC counter-spy to be a tough search
13:48Scotland tightens security for mobile health-data
13:47Home Office publishes data-sharing guidance
13:47EDS loses unencrypted armed-forces data
13:45Data-center security tools to not overlook
13:44Microsoft promises huge patch day next week
13:43Firefox add-on blocks 'clickjacking' attacks

All news for October 09, 2008:
13:44Job losses on the way for IT security staff
13:43FSA threatens executives with fines
13:39Anatomy of a SQL Injection Attack
13:37Why Security Pros Hate SharePoint
13:36Remote Workers Care About IT Security -- Really
13:35US gov't report: Data mining is ineffective
13:34Shell warns employees of suspected data loss
13:32'Fast-flux' domains help botnets evade capture
12:46Mozilla locks in Firefox 3.1 feature list
12:45Colorado state Web site dishes out SSNs of CEOs, other top execs
12:43Kernell pleads innocent to Palin hack charge
12:42Symantec to buy e-mail security vendor MessageLabs
12:41Privacy groups praise bill curbing warrantless laptop searches
12:40Tenn. student indicted for hacking Palin's e-mail



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