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5 botnet kingpins busted in $70m fraud ring
Ukrainian police on Thursday arrested five people suspected of orchestrating an international fraud ring that siphoned more than $70m out of bank accounts by infecting computers with the Zeus trojan.
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You can no longer rely on encryption to protect a BlackBerry | Mobile device management - InfoWorld
A Russian passcode-breaker firm exploits a weakness in RIM's encryption to crack open backups
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[LUG] Fwd: [AfrICANN-discuss] Google blames DNS insecurity for Web site
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Dear Twitter: Stop screwing over your developers.
OAuth and consumer secrets
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Stuxnet worm causes worldwide alarm
Stuxnet is the first known worm to target and tamper with industrial controls, in this case through a common industrial programme sold by Siemens, the electronics and engineering group. The worm has been most active in Iran, suggesting it as the location for the target, but Indonesia, India and Pakistan have also reported infections, according to Symantec, a technology security provider.
Security researchers who have been working for more than a year to decrypt and disentangle the program have become increasingly alarmed. A combination of factors is prompting this concern: the new category of target, multiple levels of sophistication that they say points to a national government as the sponsor, and the difficulty in combating the threat due to poor communication between computer experts and industry officials.
Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.
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