The recent disclosure about an attack on a Comodo affiliate registration authority has opened a wider conversation about Internet security and SSL certificates.. Wednesday, Comodo revealed a revealed a registration authority had been compromised in a March 15 attack and that the username and password of a Comodo Trusted Partner in Southern Europe were stolen. Using those credentials, the attacker was able to request nine digital certificates across seven domains, including: login.yahoo (NSDQ:YHOO).com, mail.google (NSDQ:GOOG).com, login.skype.com and addons.mozilla.org. According to Comodo, the situation was discovered within hours of the attack and all nine certificates were revoked -- only one of which the company said was seen being used. The link for this article located at CRN is no longer available. . Examines the Comodo breach regarding SSL certificates, highlighting its effects on dialogues surrounding online safety.. Comodo Attack, SSL Certificate Security, Digital Certificate Incident. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
How are VoIP networks weak and vulnerable to attack and catastrophic failure? Securing VoIP Networks, the new book by Peter Thermos and Ari Takanen, looks at VoIP infrastructure and analyzes its vulnerabilities much as the Open Web Application Security Project did for Web-related vulnerabilities and Mitre did with its Common Weakness Enumeration dictionary for software. And it. The link for this article located at NetworkWorld is no longer available. . Delve into essential VoIP vulnerability concerns and uncover the ways network weaknesses can result in devastating breaches.. VoIP Vulnerabilities, Telecommunications Risks, Network Security Issues, Potential Attacks. . Bill Locke
A team of professors from the University of California-Berkeley and University of Southern California has received a $5.46 million grant to build one of the most realistic models of the Internet -- and then wreck it with debilitating hacker attacks. Working . . . . A team of professors from the University of California-Berkeley and University of Southern California has received a $5.46 million grant to build one of the most realistic models of the Internet -- and then wreck it with debilitating hacker attacks. Working with researchers from Network Associates Laboratories and other institutions, the team is trying to answer questions with major national security implications: What would really happen if the Internet were hit with an attack bigger than the Nimda or Slammer worms? Could we fight it with existing technology? Or would everything connected to the Internet, from private e-mail boxes to automatic teller networks to power plants, topple like a house of cards? The link for this article located at Seattle Pi is no longer available. . A group from MIT and Stanford investigates digital fortitude through simulations and assessments of catastrophic online breaches.. Internet Modeling, Cybersecurity Research, Attack Simulation. . Anthony Pell
As Attorney General John Ashcroft fielded reporters' questions last Tuesday about the attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, one journalist asked if a new computer worm, discovered only hours earlier, was in any way related to the terrorist . . . . As Attorney General John Ashcroft fielded reporters' questions last Tuesday about the attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, one journalist asked if a new computer worm, discovered only hours earlier, was in any way related to the terrorist strikes. It was not, Ashcroft assured the nation--or at least, there was as yet no evidence linking it to Osama bin Laden and his ilk. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . As Attorney General John Ashcroft fielded reporters' questions last Tuesday about the attack on the . attorney, general, ashcroft, fielded, reporters', questions, tuesday, about, attack. . Anthony Pell
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