F-Secure a Finnish anti-virus vendor has come out and stated that Adobe Reader is so insecure and there have been so many recent vulnerabilities to show up, they recommend finding an alternative application to handle PDF files.
Friday, April 24, 2009
Get Rid Of Adobe Reader!
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Help Wipe Out Spammers
Here is a neat idea on a way to cripple spam-bots. The people at Office Of Strategic Influence have created a way to generate random e-mail addresses. So that when a spammer hits your website and tries to harvest e-mails, it floods their server with bogus addresses. Nice idea if it works. If it cuts down on spam, I'm all for it. The link below takes you to the page where you can pick up the code necessary to input into your website or blog:
This Link Kills Spam
Hosted on: Office Of Strategic Influence
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Lock Your Personal Folders
After watching the previous video, you might want to know of a good way that you can lock your personal information away from prying eyes. Just like a personal file proof safe in your house, this prevents the inadvertent compromise situation. Someone gets access to your computer and is able to find some file on your computer with personal information, i.e. a tax record, birth certificate, or anything that has your social security number, passwords etc.
My Lockbox is a freeware program that allows you to password protect folders on your computer where you have personal information. It's time we all took alot more care with this data. We can't prevent that data from being accessed on companies we do business with, but you can protect it on your own computer.
Why Not To Use File Sharing P2P software
This one is VERY interesting. If your kids, or you yourself use a file sharing program, here is the reason not to! This morning on the Today Show, they did a piece about the threat of identity theft from using one of these programs. My jaw literally dropped when they revealed how many tax records were assessable in the state of New York alone by searching for Tax Returns New York. Beware people, the threat of ID Theft is growing due to the stress of the economic times we live in. Watch and learn!
Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy
Monday, February 9, 2009
Identity Fraud Survey Shows ID Theft up 22%
Identity theft rose by nearly 25 percent last year in the United States, according to a new report released today. The 2009 Identity Fraud Survey Report by Javelin Strategy & Research shows that the number of identity fraud victims increased 22 percent to 9.9 million people being hit, at a total cost of $48 billion.
According to James Van Dyke, president and founder of Javelin, this is the first year since the report began in 2004 that the numbers have gone up. "The industry was surprised at the whopping size of identity theft when it was first studied in the early part of the millennium, but it was beaten back strongly. But now, with the tough economy, criminals have become more desperate, and identity theft has gone up for the first time since we began tracking it," Van Dyke says.
Read the rest of the story at Bankinfosecurity.com
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Report: 90% of Web Sites Vulnerable to Hackers
New study claims Cross-Site Scripting attacks are all over the place. Should we be afraid?
internetnews.com: We all know that some Web sites suffer from security vulnerabilities -- but 90 percent of them?
In a new report, security researcher Whitehat Security said it found a staggering nine out of 10 Web sites have some type of serious vulnerability that a hacker could potentially exploit.
The study, which examined more than 600 sites including those of Fortune 500 firms, found a number of different vulnerabilities common across the Internet, with Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities dominating the rankings.
In fact, Whitehat claims that 70 percent of the Web sites it surveyed were at risk from some sort of XSS attack. That figure dwarfs the No. 2 culprit in the firm's survey, SQL injection, which comprised only 4 percent of the firm's total surveyed vulnerabilities.
For the rest of the story CLICK HERE
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Comcast Cameras to Start Watching You?
If you have some tinfoil handy, now might be a good time to fashion a hat. At the Digital Living Room conference today, Gerard Kunkel, Comcast’s senior VP of user experience, told me the cable company is experimenting with different camera technologies built into devices so it can know who’s in your living room.
The idea being that if you turn on your cable box, it recognizes you and pulls up shows already in your profile or makes recommendations. If parents are watching TV with their children, for example, parental controls could appear to block certain content from appearing on the screen. Kunkel also said this type of monitoring is the “holy grail” because it could help serve up specifically tailored ads. Yikes.
read more | digg story
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Librarian fired after reporting patron viewing child porn
Found on PogoWasRight.org: One California county may be facing a lawsuit by former librarian Brenda Biesterfeld, who says she was fired after alerting authorities that a patron was viewing child pornography on library computers.
A librarian assistant at the Lindsay Library, Biesterfeld was on the job late last month when she noticed 39-year-old Donny Chrisler downloading child porn on library computers. Biesterfeld told her supervisor Judi Hill, who instructed her to issue Chrisler a warning. Instead, Biesterfeld called police the next day. A few days later, Chrisler returned and Biesterfeld noticed he was once again viewing child porn. She notified police, who came and arrested Chrisler on the spot.
According to a press release, the police also confiscated the library's computer that had used by Chrisler. Supervisor Hill confronted police, accusing them of interfering where they did not belong and assuring them that county librarians were handling the matter internally. After police explained that, since federal law had been violated, it was now a legal matter in their hands, Hill demanded to know who reported the incident. The police protected Biesterfeld's identity. However, she was fired two days later.
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
RFID-hack hits 1B digital access cards worldwide
The Dutch government has issued a warning about the security of access keys that are based on the widely used Mifare Classic RFID chip.
Government institutions plan to take "additional security measures to safeguard security, " Guusje ter Horst, minister of interior affairs, wrote in a letter to parliament on Wednesday.
NXP developed the Mifare Classic RFID (radio frequency identification) chip, which is used in 2 million Dutch building access passes, said ter Horst. One billion passes with the technology have been distributed worldwide, making the security risk a global problem. A spokesperson for the ministry told Webwereld, an IDG affiliate, that it had not yet notified other countries.
To read the rest of the story CLICK HERE
You think you are free?
From Gulfnews.com: Watching old movies makes me sad. I'm inevitably reminded of a kindlier, gentler world without cameras that spy on populations, where overseas travelling was pleasurable and privacy was an individual's right.
Nowadays, states are usurping responsibilities that are rightfully those of their citizens. Western so-called democracies, in particular, are supposed to have governments that are servants of the people, whereas, in fact, the opposite is true. Under the guise of doing what's best for us or ensuring our security, governments are exercising more and more control over our lives. And, tragically, we are facilitating this erosion of our own freedoms, mostly because we're not even aware it's happening.
To read the rest of the story CLICK HERE
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Identity Theft & Family
Found on the simpledollar.com: I’m writing on behalf of a friend who just graduated from college two years ago and is trying to get on her financial feet. When she was young her mother used her identity several times to get loans and open credit cards. Her mother is a homeless nomad who has not taken responsibility for any of these accounts and has ruined my friend’s credit. She doesn’t even know how many loans and credit cards were obtained in her name, if any are paid of and to what degree, etc. She tries to run her credit report but can’t because she can’t answer the basic questions about her last address or last loan because it’s all her mother’s information.
Her mother has not used her identity for financial gain, that she knows of, in about three years. My friend is trying to be responsible. She has a good job, no debt of her own (just what her mother accrued!), and is trying to live more frugally. She’s been turned down several times for a credit card and obviously, can’t get any other sort of loan. Is there any way to get her mother’s mistakes off her report? It seems like identity theft to me, but I’m not sure how to advise her. Could a lawyer help her clear her report? It doesn’t sound like her mother will be able to pay for any outstanding charges, and I don’t know if suing her would do much good. Since many of these accounts were opened when my friend was under 18, I just can’t believe that she’d be held resposible for all of it. It’s just not fair, and I feel awful for her. Thanks in advance for your help.
For the advice given and the comments CLICK HERE
Data thieves steal credit card data from supermarket chain
Data thieves broke into computers at supermarket chains Hannaford Brothers and Sweetbay, stealing an estimated 4.2 million credit and debit card numbers, Hannaford said Monday.
"The stolen data was limited to credit and debit card numbers and expiration dates, and was illegally accessed from our computer systems during transmission of card authorization," said Hannaford CEO Ron Hodge, in a statement posted to the company's Web site.
For the rest of the story CLICK HERE







