'Tis the season for giving. And anybody visiting Amnesty International's UK website could currently end up with the gift of a keylogger courtesy a Java exploit. Brian Krebs has written about it on his blog: Krebs on Security. Amnesty's UK site was hacked to include an iframe linking to a Brazilian server, which hosts a CVE-2011-3544 based Java Exploit. Our browsing protection is now blocking Amnes
Big news today. A new backdoor created by someone who had access to the source code of Stuxnet has been found. Stuxnet source code is not out in-the-wild (only the binaries). Only the original authors have the source code. So, this new backdoor was created by the same party that created Stuxnet. For a refresher on Stuxnet — arguably the most important malware in history — see our Q&A. Unlike Stuxn
Almost from the beginning of the DigiNotar CA Disaster (report here), we had a reason to believe the case was connected to "ComodoGate" — the hacking of another Certificate Authority earlier this year, by an Iranian attacker. This connection has now been confirmed. After ComodoGate, the hacker — who called himself ComodoHacker — sent a series of messages via his Pastebin account. Then at the end o
We've covered targeted attacks many times in the past and we've also covered PDF and vulnerabilities in Adobe Acrobat/Reader being used to install malware. So we decided to take a look at targeted attacks and see which file types were the most popular during 2008 and if that has changed at all during 2009. In 2008 we identified about 1968 targeted attack files. The most popular file type was DOC,
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く