Hackers have posted personal information about the chief executive of J.P. Morgan Chase in solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street protests.. The document released on Pastebin by "CabinCr3w" includes information about CEO James Dimon's addresses, family, business connections, political contributions and legal information. A spokeswoman for J.P. Morgan Chase said the company is declining to comment. The link for this article located at News.com is no longer available. . Revealed information concerning J.P. Morgan's leader, James Dimon, highlights escalating cybersecurity risks in the wake of demonstrations.. Data Breach Threats, Corporate Security Risks, Hacker Activism, Private Information Leaks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
More people are using PDAs for keeping business data, increasing the security problems faced by corporates, according to the second annual PDA Usage Survey. Billions of pounds continue to be wasted each year on corporate security that is easily bypassed . . . . More people are using PDAs for keeping business data, increasing the security problems faced by corporates, according to the second annual PDA Usage Survey. Billions of pounds continue to be wasted each year on corporate security that is easily bypassed because so many employees leave unprotected passwords and corporate information on their personal digital assistants (PDAs), according to a recent survey. The second annual PDA Usage Survey, which was carried out on behalf of Pointsec Mobile Technologies, has discovered that a third of PDA owners store work passwords and cash machine PIN numbers on their PDAs, but do not secure access to their PDA in case the device is stolen or lost. The survey also highlighted that the role of PDAs has changed in the past year. Whereas in 2002 their main use was as a personal organiser, this year the top function is as a business diary. The link for this article located at ZDNetUK is no longer available. . More people are using PDAs for keeping business data, increasing the security problems faced by corp. people, using, keeping, business, increasing, security, problems, faced. . Anthony Pell
While proponents of Linux systems maintain that the many security vulnerabilities and attacks coming to the fore are due to Microsoft's dominance in the market and its inherent vulnerabilities, others believe that Bill Gates' behemoth company is beginning to hold its . . . . While proponents of Linux systems maintain that the many security vulnerabilities and attacks coming to the fore are due to Microsoft's dominance in the market and its inherent vulnerabilities, others believe that Bill Gates' behemoth company is beginning to hold its own in acknowledging and addressing security issues. With fame, however, misfortune can follow. "If we are talking serious, determined attacks on corporate data, rather than 'education' or ego-boosting web hacks, then Microsoft products may well get more hits," says Viktor Ozherelyev, program manager for Aelita Software's control migration suite. "I would attribute this to the fact that these products, unlike the vast majority of Linux installations, power internal business infrastructures. A recent study said that 90 per cent of business information worldwide is stored in Office documents, Word and Excel files residing on Windows NT/2000 servers." The link for this article located at SC Magazine is no longer available. . Linux and Windows each offer unique security strengths and weaknesses in cybersecurity that organizations must carefully evaluate to protect corporate data effectively. Linux Security Advantages, Windows OS Vulnerabilities, Corporate Data Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Computer hackers with political agendas have become a fast-growing threat to big companies worldwide, according to a corporate intelligence company. "The methods they are using are in their infancy," says Kent Anderson of Control Risks Group, an international business risk consultancy. . . . . Computer hackers with political agendas have become a fast-growing threat to big companies worldwide, according to a corporate intelligence company. "The methods they are using are in their infancy," says Kent Anderson of Control Risks Group, an international business risk consultancy. The political cyberthreat was highlighted along with those on the ground at a rollout of the British-based company's "Risk Map 2001," an annual survey of perceived dangers to corporate clients. Anderson traces "hacktivism" to the 1994 Zapatista guerrilla uprising for greater democracy and Indian rights in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas. The link for this article located at PC World is no longer available. . Cyber intruders pursuing ideological objectives are emerging as an escalating danger to major corporations across the globe.. Hacktivism, Corporate Threats, Cyber Espionage, Political Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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