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September 24, 2008

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

World news

October 13, 2008

Exceed biometric standards, expert urges

Deloitte laptop loss spreads to rail workers and police

Malware writers spoof Patch Tuesday

Security disclosures tip the stock market

Mafiaboy Grows Up; a Hacker Seeks Redemption

Vendors, Cops, Profs Team to Study Cybercrime

Six Essential Apple iPhone Security Tips

Apple asks judge to make iPhone lawsuit moot

Report: World Bank servers breached repeatedly

Exploit code loose for six-month-old Windows bug

Google allies with click-fraud detection firm Click Forensics

Over half of U.K. firms have lost data

U.S. proposes digital signing of DNS root zone file

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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 23, 2006

Spyware firms pay token fines to FTC

Two alleged spyware operations have settled lawsuits brought by the US Federal Trade Commission.

Odysseus Marketing and its principal, Walter Rines, along with John Robert Martinson, the principal of Mailwiper, and its successor, Spy Deleter, have agreed to be bound by injunctions against exploiting security vulnerabilities to download software or misrepresenting the purpose of their wares. In addition, the operators agreed to pay a combined total of $50,000 in fines, a modest total that's unlikely in itself to deter anyone else contemplating by violation of US federal anti-spyware laws.

Odysseus marketed a program called Kazanon that purportedly allowed consumers to engage in anonymous peer-to-peer file sharing. According to the FTC, the package was loaded with spyware that snooped on user's surfing habits, manipulated search results and bombarded punters with intrusive pop-up ads. Odysseus also allegedly exploited browser vulnerabilities to dump its crud on user's desktops. The FTC settlement obliges Odysseus to destroy the personal information of users it collected. The FTC wanted to fine Rines $1.75m for his firm's anti-social behaviour but because he's broke it will collect $10,000. The rest of the fine is suspended.

Mailwiper punted bogus anti-spyware products marketed under the names Spy Wiper and Spy Deleter. Affiliates of the firm, including infamous former spammer Sanford Wallace, exploited IE vulnerabilities to distribute spyware to promote the product, the FTC alleges. The settlement also imposes a $1.86m judgment on Martinson (Mailwiper's main man) which is suspended, except for $40,000, based on his inability to pay. Wallace was previously fined $4m over his role in distributing Spy Wiper and Spy Deleter, products which failed to live up to their promises of cleaning up infected PCs.

In the case of both settlements, neither defendant has admitted any wrongdoing. The closure of the cases against Odysseus and Mailwiper are the latest in a string of enforcement actions brought the FTC against spyware outfits.

The effectiveness of these spyware lawsuit settlement has been called into question after security researchers unearthed evidence that infamous adware firm Zango (the former 180solutions) was up to its old tricks just two week after it settled adware distribution charges with the FTC.

Zango admits to problems in the past but claims to have cleaned up its act since the start of the year. However, spyware watcher Ben Edelman has published a study explaining that deceptive installs of Zango software continue to take place. Following its own investigation, the Center for Democracy and Technology has filed a fresh complaint about Zango to the FTC.


Source: The Register




All news for October 13, 2008:
12:44Exceed biometric standards, expert urges
12:42Deloitte laptop loss spreads to rail workers and police
12:40Malware writers spoof Patch Tuesday
12:39Security disclosures tip the stock market
12:38Mafiaboy Grows Up; a Hacker Seeks Redemption
12:37Vendors, Cops, Profs Team to Study Cybercrime
12:36Six Essential Apple iPhone Security Tips
12:34Apple asks judge to make iPhone lawsuit moot
12:34Report: World Bank servers breached repeatedly
12:33Exploit code loose for six-month-old Windows bug
12:32Google allies with click-fraud detection firm Click Forensics
12:30Over half of U.K. firms have lost data
12:30U.S. proposes digital signing of DNS root zone file

* No news for October 11, 2008 - October 12, 2008

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



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