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Keylogger.Org Site News

December 08th, 2008

New version of ReFog Personal Monitor and its review added!

Security World News
Keylogger.Org Security World News

January 06th, 2009

Security spending stays strong

Security experts warn against pirated Windows 7

China vows to clean up the internet

RIAA dumps sleuthing firm

Simple Hack Beats Biometrics

Researchers Hack Into Intel's VPro

Thailand blocks 2,300 websites

Hackers hijack Obama's, Britney's Twitter accounts

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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.

November 18th, 2008

District court halts keylogger spyware sales

A U.S. District Court has temporarily halted the sale of RemoteSpy keylogger spyware at the request of the Federal Trade Commission, which claims the software violates the FTC Act.

The FTC filed a complaint (PDF) against Florida-based CyberSpy Software on November 5, alleging the company has violated the FTC Act by selling software that can be deployed remotely by someone other than the owner or authorized user of a computer, can be installed without the owner's knowledge, and can used to surreptitiously collect and disclose personal information. The FTC also claims CyberSpy unfairly collected and stored personal information gathered with RemoteSpy.

In its complaint, the FTC asked the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Orlando Division, to issue a temporary restraining order halting the sale of RemoteSpy while its case is pending, permanently ban the sale of RemoteSpy, and require CyberSpy to pay restitution for any injury to consumers resulting from its violations of the FTC Act.

The court, in its temporary restraining order filed November 6 against CyberSpy, said there is a "substantial likelihood" that the FTC will be able to prove the spyware maker violated the FTC Act.

"The sale and operation of RemoteSpy is likely to cause substantial harm to consumers that cannot be reasonably avoided and is not outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or to competition," the court wrote. "The likely harm includes financial harm (including identity theft) and endangering the health and safety of consumers."

Along with barring CyberSpy from selling RemoteSpy, the restraining order bars the company from disclosing or making available any information obtained through the software. It also requires CyberSpy to ensure any Web sites associated with the product, including www.remotespy.com, are not publicly accessible.

The FTC's complaint names Tracer R. Spence, the registered agent and manager of CyberSpy, as liable for the charges against the spyware maker.

CyberSpy's possible violations were first brought to light to the FTC in a complaint (PDF) filed in March by the Electronic Privacy Information Center.

Though other federal agencies have been known to use keylogger software, the FTC has been challenging the distribution of spyware for the past four years.


Source: CNET News




All news for January 06th, 2009:
15:58Security spending stays strong
15:58Security experts warn against pirated Windows 7
15:57China vows to clean up the internet
15:56RIAA dumps sleuthing firm
15:55Simple Hack Beats Biometrics
15:54Researchers Hack Into Intel's VPro
15:53Thailand blocks 2,300 websites
15:52Hackers hijack Obama's, Britney's Twitter accounts

All news for January 05th, 2009:
16:36Police get new hacking powers
16:36VeriSign addresses SSL certificate flaw
16:35'Curse of silence' flaw hits smartphones
16:32Microsoft tells how it missed critical IE bug
16:31Expert: Microsoft made $1.5B on 'Vista Capable' campaign



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