home contact keylogger.org add keylogger.org to favorites set keylogger.org as homepage Anti-Keylogger.org
Keylogger testing and reviews

Keylogger testing policy

Press-releases

Keylogger developers

Links
Monitoring Software Keylogger articles

Get Free Software

Keylogger chat

Keylogger forum

Sponsorship & services
Advertising
Your Ad Here
Site News
Current section

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

Newsletter
E-mail: 
Subscribe
Send to friend
E-mail: 
Send
Voting

We are planning to redesign our site. We would like You to express your opinion in this respect. Would you like to leave the site as it is? What changes would you like to suggest?

Yes, I like the site as it is.
It's ok, but some changes are necessary.
It should be changed completely.
VotingView results
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.

December 22, 2006

A holiday season for hackers?

There wasn't a lot of holiday cheer for Microsoft's Security Response Center late last year.

Just a few days after Christmas, criminals had found a new way to attack. By taking advantage of an unpatched bug in the way Internet Explorer processed an obscure graphics format, called WMF (Windows Metafile), they were able to install unauthorized software on PCs.

Soon reports started coming into Microsoft of malicious Web sites that were taking advantage of this bug to spread adware and spyware.

‘Within 15 minutes, we were all on the phone and people were coming in and discussing it through the holidays,’ said Mark Griesi, senior program manager with Microsoft.

‘People were literally here 24 hours a day,’ he said. ‘I really hand it to those guys. They came in and worked through the holidays ... It's a side of Microsoft that folks don't see.’

A week later, Microsoft took the unusual step of issuing an emergency patch for the WMF problem. Still, critics said that the software giant had waited too long, given the scope of the attack.

So will there be another WMF-style outbreak next week?

Nobody really knows the answer to that question, of course, but recent patterns of attacks seem to suggest it may be likely. The Sobig, Blaster and Zotob worms were all released in August, for example, the end of summer holidays in Europe and the U.S., and attackers seem to be getting better lately at timing the release of their malicious software in order to have maximum effect.

IT administrators are harder to reach, and less likely to patch software or issue work-arounds during the holidays. And college-age hackers have more time on their hands to work out new attacks, or so the thinking goes.

Security experts generally agree that another WMF-style attack is no more likely to occur next week than any other, however.

The idea that attacks somehow spike during the holidays is ‘more of a fallacy than anything else,’ said David Marcus, security research and communications manager with McAfee's Avert Labs. ‘Most enterprises I've dealt with have just as much coverage during the holidays as any time of year.’

Microsoft's Griesi agreed that the traditional holiday business slowdown in the U.S. does not apply to security professionals. ‘The holiday season doesn't affect our ability to respond,’ he said.

Though enterprises may be prepared for cyberattacks, the December rush of online shopping does spur certain types of online scams, Marcus said. ‘You'll see certain techniques become prevalent at certain times of the year,’ Marcus said. ‘You'll see some holiday spam or some charity spam.’

Nevertheless, Susan Bradley plans to be a little extra-cautious over the next week, monitoring a well-known computer security discussion list for any signs of trouble. ‘I will be looking at the Full Disclosure list like crazy’ said Bradley, chief technology officer with Tamiyasu, Smith, Horn and Braun, Accountancy.

And like Microsoft, many businesses are prepared to quickly mobilize their IT teams, in the event of an attack.

At the Port of Seattle, for example, security monitoring will continue as normal over the holidays, according to Ernie Hayden, chief information security manager with the port.

He isn't sure whether next week will bring another WMF-style outbreak, but he said he was holding to a simple mantra over the holiday season. ‘Be prepared. Just be a good old-fashioned Boy Scout,’ he said. ‘Don't expect that everything you're doing is going to be perfect.’


Source: ComputerWorld




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



All news for October, 2008
All news for 2008 year
All news for 2007 year
All news for 2006 year
All news for 2005 year
All news for 2004 year


DONATION: Keylogger.org is an independent research project supported by a team of enthusiasts. If you find this project useful or would like to help foster its continued development please consider making a donation using PayPal`s online secure payment service.

A PayPal account is not required. All major credit cards are accepted (MasterCard/Eurocard, Visa/Delta/Electron, American Express, Switch/Maestro, Solo). Simply click the button below.

Any amount would be useful and appreciated!

Thanks in advance for your support!

Advertising
Your Ad Here
| home | testing and reviews | testing policy | press_releases | developers |

| articles | contest | chat | forum | sponsorship & services | contacts | links |
Copyright © 2003-2008, Keylogger.Org Team. All Rights Reserved.
Use of any information from this website is permitted only with hypertext link to www.keylogger.org.