News Briefs Study Finds 75% of Malicious Websites from Legitimate, Trusted Sources Jul 29, 2008 - Include Your Comments (1 posted) Cyber Threats Accelerate: 94% of Web Browser Exploits Occur Within 24 Hours of Disclosure Jul 29, 2008 - Include Your Comments Apple Criticized by Security Experts for Not Patching DNS Bug Jul 28, 2008 - Include Your Comments Manufacturers Urged to Upgrade Routers, Network Management Software Before End of Year Jul 28, 2008 - Include Your Comments Possible First Attacks on DNS Flaw Have Been Reported Jul 28, 2008 - Include Your Comments (1 posted) Chinese Government Accused of Being Behind 'Titan Rain' Cyber Attacks Jul 28, 2008 - Include Your Comments British Hacker Faces 60 Years in US Prison for Accessing Top-Secret Documents Jul 26, 2008 - Include Your Comments Microsoft Funds Its Rival Apache Open-Source Web Server Software Jul 26, 2008 - Include Your Comments Google Says Its Counting Over 1 Trillion Unique Pages on the Web? Jul 26, 2008 - Include Your Comments FCC Majority Vote Set to Punish Comcast on P2P Blocking Jul 26, 2008 - Include Your Comments Small Businesses in Denial about Threat Posed by Cyberattacks Jul 25, 2008 - Include Your Comments China Internet Users Pass 250 Million, Surpassing U.S. as Largest Internet Population Jul 25, 2008 - Include Your Comments Pump-n-dump Spammer Eddie Davidson and Family Found Dead Jul 24, 2008 - Include Your Comments 17 Countries to Reach 60% Household Broadband Penetration by 2012, Says New Study Jul 24, 2008 - Include Your Comments All Major U.S. Senate Democratic Challengers Announce Support for Net Neutrality Jul 24, 2008 - Include Your Comments US-CERT Says They Are Aware of DNS Exploit Code, Emphasizes Urgent Patching Jul 24, 2008 - Include Your Comments Open Web Foundation Launches to Push Data Portability Jul 24, 2008 - Include Your Comments ICANN Says It Is Not an Internet Enforcement Agency Jul 24, 2008 - Include Your Comments Six Largest ISPs in UK Agree to Send Warning Letters to Illegal Music, Movie Downloaders Jul 24, 2008 - Include Your Comments Cablecos, Telcos Childish Behavior Harmful to National Interest, Says Vint Cerf Jul 23, 2008 - Include Your Comments Google Talks About Owning Your Internet Connection Jul 23, 2008 - Include Your Comments (2 posted) DNS Attack Code Has Been Published Jul 23, 2008 - Include Your Comments Buzz About Mobile WiMax Heating Up Jul 23, 2008 - Include Your Comments Targeted Social Engineering Attacks Against Corporations Reach Record Levels Jul 23, 2008 - Include Your Comments Just a Matter of Time Before DNS Attack Code Might Surface Jul 22, 2008 - Include Your Comments (3 posted) Notorious Spam King Gets 4 Years in Prison Jul 22, 2008 - Include Your Comments Featured Blogs Deep Packet Inspection: When the Man-In-The-Middle Wants Money Say you're walking down the sidewalk having a talk with your best friend about all kinds of things. What if you found out later that the sidewalk you were using wasn't really a sidewalk -- but instead a kind of false-front giant copying machine, unobstrusively vacuuming up what you were saying and adding to its database of information about you? Or, say you send a letter to a client of yours (to the extent you still do this), and it turns out later that your letter was intercepted, steamed open, and the contents were read... more » Jul 28, 2008 - by Susan Crawford - Comments: 1 Related Topics: Access Providers, Broadband, Privacy Click Fraud, Botnets and Parked Domains - All Inclusive It gets very ugly when someone owns both, the botnet, and the portfolio of parked domains actively participating in pay per click (PPC) advertising programs, where the junk content, or the typosquatted domain names are aiming to attract high value and expensive keywords in order for the scammer to earn higher on per click percentage. This is among the very latest tactics applied by those engaged in click fraud activites. more » Jul 28, 2008 - by Dancho Danchev - Comments: 0 Related Topics: Cybersquatting, Domain Names, Law, Security IPv6… Unstoppable Road to Hyperconnectivity: Blame It On Opiates! Some think IPv6 with its myriad addresses will accelerate the evolution of a hyperconnected world. But could a world where everything and everybody is sensed, monitored, located, to augment our quasi real-time interaction with the world outside our little selves, lead to total dependency, if not to gradual stupidity of the human race? Not surprisingly, a favourite topic for (late night) Internet Conference bar discussions... more » Jul 27, 2008 - by Yves Poppe - Comments: 0 Related Topics: IPv6 Counting the Bullets on the (Malware) Front How much malware is your antivirus solution detecting? A million, ten million, even "worse", less than a million? Does it really matter? No, it doesn't. What's marketable can also be irrelevant if you are to consider that today's malware is no longer coded, but generated efficiently and obfuscated on the fly. Sophos's recent statistics: "It is estimated that the total number of unique malware samples in existence now exceeds 11 million, with Sophos currently receiving approximately 20,000 new samples of suspicious software every single day -- one every four seconds." more » Jul 25, 2008 - by Dancho Danchev - Comments: 0 Related Topics: Security Is This Only Sloppy Wording by ICANN? So I wrote earlier that I though it was good stuff when ICANN released a paper on DNS Security. Yes, I think it was good this paper was released, and yes it points out correctly how important DNSSEC is. But, now when reading it in detail, I find two things that troubles me. And it has to do with management of .ARPA. A top level domain that is used for infrastructural purposes. Like IP-addresses and E.164 numbers... more » Jul 25, 2008 - by Patrik Fältström - Comments: 0 Related Topics: DNS, DNSSEC, Internet Governance, Law, Security Vint Cerf Caught Off Guard, Nevertheless Says What Needs to Be Said About Our Misguided Policy This morning's mail brought news of a 3 minute 45 second video clip of very candid and very outstanding remarks from Vint Cerf. Vint says very clearly what needs to be said and what needs to be grasped and acted on by the new president and congress next year... My observation is that in my opinion it is not the lighting that is unusual but rather the camera angle. It looks like interviewer is seated with his camera pointed up. The camera is looking at Vint's chin. Consequently I sent Vint an email: "you knew you were being recorded - surely? I hope: in any case the good deed is done... thank you sir." Vint replied with permission to quote... more » Jul 24, 2008 - by Gordon Cook - Comments: 12 Related Topics: Access Providers, Broadband, Net Neutrality, Policy & Regulation ICANN Releases Paper on Domain Name Security Today ICANN releases a paper with the title "DNSSEC @ ICANN - Signing the root zone: A way forward toward operational readiness". The paper explains in more detail than earlier documents what ICANN view on signing of the root zone is. I think the key points mentioned in this paper are true, and in general, I think this document is a good read. It is not long, and summarizes what I would call the current view is. more » Jul 24, 2008 - by Patrik Fältström - Comments: 0 Related Topics: DNS, DNSSEC, Security Email Hacking Going Commercial This email hacking as a service offering is the direct result of the public release of a do it yourself hacking kit consisting of each and every publicly known vulnerability for a variety of web based email service providers, with the idea to make it easier for someone to execute their attacks more efficiently. Outsource the hacking of someone's email, and receive a proof in the form of a screenshot of the inbox, next to a guarantee that you'll be able to get back in even after they've changed their passwords? Too good to be true, but since they only charge after they provide you with a proof that they did the job, they could be in fact attempting to hack these emails, compared to the majority of cases where scammers scam the scammers. more » Jul 24, 2008 - by Dancho Danchev - Comments: 0 Related Topics: Security Shouting 'Bug' on a Crowded Internet… In the last few weeks we've seen two very different approaches to the full disclosure of security flaws in large-scale computer systems. Problems in the domain name system have been kept quiet long enough for vendors to find and fix their software, while details of how to hack Transport for London's Oyster card will soon be available to anyone with a laptop computer and a desire to break the law. These two cases highlight a major problem facing the computing industry, one that goes back many years and is still far from being unresolved. Given that there are inevitably bugs, flaws and unexpected interactions in complex systems, how much information about them should be made public by researchers when the details could be helpful to criminals or malicious hackers? more » Jul 22, 2008 - by Bill Thompson - Comments: 8 Related Topics: DNS, Security | Hot Topics • Security • DNS • Access Providers • Broadband • Web • Law • Domain Names • more... Industry Updates Red Cross Society of China Launches Official Mobile Site Jul 29, 2008 - by dotMobi NeuStar Names Alex Berry Head of Internet Infrastructure Services Group Jul 23, 2008 - by NeuStar Moniker.com Announces Domain Name Inventory for the Upcoming Online Auction at Affiliate Summit 2008 Jul 23, 2008 - by DomainSponsor RegistryPro Confirms Melbourne IT to Join .Pro TLD Relaunch Jul 22, 2008 - by RegistryPro .ORG Becomes the First Generic Top level Domain to Start DNSSEC Implementation Jul 21, 2008 - by PIR Advertise on CircleID If your advertising and marketing objectives entail reaching high-ranking experts and professionals within the IT and Internet industry, CircleID can help you achieve it. Find Out More... |
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