ISA Presents Melissa Hathaway With Award

February 9, 2010 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

From The Internet Security Alliance

The Internet Security Alliance presented Melissa Hathaway with its annual award for vision in cyber security Tuesday during an event at the National Press Club. Hathaway, the Obama Administration’s former acting cyber security chief, received the McCurdy Award on the one-year anniversary of when she began her 60-day review of the government’s cyber security program. ISA believes that Hathaway’s work, if implemented, would result in the establishment of a modern partnership between the public and private sectors, which is necessary for an effective and sustainable system of cyber security.

Web Security From A New Perspective

January 31, 2010 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

By Sean Wilkins, Contributor at CIOZone

Cisco’s existing product lines offer a number of different appliance options which allow companies the ability to block the various web based threats in existence. The problem that this type of solution has is that it does require constant tweaking of the filtering and analysis settings as well as someone to constantly keep an eye on current events as zero-day attacks become more prominent.

ISAlliance Event Featuring Melissa Hathaway

January 27, 2010 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

From The Internet Security Alliance

The ISA will present Melissa Hathaway with an award for her contributions to cyber security, exactly one year after the Obama Administration appointed her to conduct a 60-day review of the government’s cyber security program. There will also be a question and answer opportunity with Hathaway and ISA President Larry Clinton.

DoS Attacks and Continuity of Operations

January 20, 2010 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

By Sean Wilkins, Contributor at CIOZone

These types of attacks are typically launched from computer robots (bots) which are exploited computers which have an Internet connection. These bots are then directed by central controllers to do the tasks assigned. These tasks vary but can include initiating a DDoS attack on a specified target. Now when the combined bandwidth of thousands of bots comes into play, any company can have their Internet connectivity partially or completely blocked.

Broadcasting Vulnerabilities Hinders Security

January 10, 2010 by ADMIN · 2 Comments

By Tom Groenfeldt, Technology Journalist - Contributor at CIOZone

The way most of the vendors do PC security makes it very easy for the bad guys to circumvent their software pretty quickly, said John Viega, vice president of engineering at McAfee and author of a new book, The Myths of Security: What the Computer Security Industry Doesn’t Want You to Know. The technologies generally have not gotten good enough fast enough, and there hasn’t been the best collaboration between vendors, even though they do collaborate, he added. They are getting better, but some vendors, who market by publicly announcing vulnerabilities in popular software packages, do more to hurt than help…

Report: China Probing Soft Cyber Underbelly

December 13, 2009 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

By Tom Groenfeldt, Technology Journalist - Contributor at CIOZone

In China today, there are thousands of people in a sustained effort to collect intelligence, many of them on an entrepreneurial basis within a competing bureaucratic structure. China understands that a strategic vulnerability of the United States is its soft cyber underbelly. I believe they seek to ‘own’ that space, says Mike McConnell, former director of National Intelligence and director of the NSA.

TSA Breach is a Nightmare for Holiday Travel

December 9, 2009 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

Laura Wilson, JD, CISA

This week’s revelation that the Transportation Safety Administration exposed its rules for airport security screening online is outrageous. As holiday travel ramps up, the possibilities and repercussions are horrifying. Coupled with the huge rise in information security breaches across many sectors and rampant identity theft, the TSA’s breach sets the stage for potential disaster.

Massive TSA Security Breach Revealed

December 8, 2009 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

By BRIAN ROSS and MATT HOSFORD of ABC News

In a massive security breach, the Transportation Security Agency (TSA) inadvertently posted online its entire airport screening procedures manual, including some of the most closely guarded secrets regarding special rules for diplomats and CIA and law enforcement officers.

Cyber Liability Insurance Mitigates Exposure

December 7, 2009 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

By Laton McCartney, Editor at CIOZone

CIOs are starting to embrace the idea of protecting against the risk that comes about as the unintended consequence of Web 2.0 technology. At the same time, data is becoming increasingly regulated, which is creating new exposures, particularly in the areas of data privacy and reputational risk,” Drew Bartkiewicz, vice president of cyber and new media risk at The Hartford, tells CIOZone’s Latom McCartney.

Ten Most Damaging Data Breaches of 2009

December 4, 2009 by ADMIN · Leave a Comment

By Laton McCartney, Editor at CIOZone

Every week for the past four years the Privacy Rights Clearing House has been chronicling data breaches on a weekly basis. “These are the mega-breaches that can skew the figures in terms of the number of people victimized,” says Paul Stephens, PRCH’s director of policy and advocacy. Here are the ten biggest, most damaging and most embarrassing breaches to date this year.

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