It is any CIO's worst nightmare -- a malicious attack on your organization's critical data, resulting in the loss of millions of dollars in customer assets and proprietary information -- not to mention irreparable damage to your company's hard-won reputation.. . .. It is any CIO's worst nightmare -- a malicious attack on your organization's critical data, resulting in the loss of millions of dollars in customer assets and proprietary information -- not to mention irreparable damage to your company's hard-won reputation. The attack can come from competitors, independent hackers, or even disgruntled employees. But whatever the source, one thing is clear -- those determined to infiltrate an organization's security infrastructure are becoming more resourceful, and they are succeeding more often than ever before. To demonstrate how easily an organization's valuable data and systems can be penetrated, PSINet Europe, a European network and hosting infrastructure provider, decided to find out how susceptible an unprotected server connected to the Internet might be by setting up an anonymous dummy test server. The company quickly proved its point when the server was attacked more than 600 times within a three week period. Security attacks like these are more common than one might think. According to the Computer Security Institute's 2003 Computer Crime and Security Survey, 82 percent of organizations have experienced a virus-related attack, while 45 percent reported unauthorized access by insiders, 35 percent reported system penetration, and 21 percent have experienced sabotage and theft of proprietary information. The survey also found that theft of proprietary information causes the greatest financial loss -- an average of $2.7 million for each of the organizations surveyed. The link for this article located at CIO is no longer available. . CTOs grapple with daunting threats from cyber intrusions targeting essential information, resulting in significant financial losses and tarnished reputations.. CIOStrategies,Cyber Threats,Data Protection,Attack Response. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Wireless networks are a little less secure today with the public release of "AirSnort," a tool that can surreptitiously grab and analyze data moving across just about every major wireless network. When enough information has been captured, AirSnort can then piece together the system's master password.. . .. Wireless networks are a little less secure today with the public release of "AirSnort," a tool that can surreptitiously grab and analyze data moving across just about every major wireless network. When enough information has been captured, AirSnort can then piece together the system's master password. In other words, hackers and/or eavesdroppers using AirSnort can just grab what they want from a company's database wirelessly, out of thin air. Be sure to read our announcement for AirSnort The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . Wireless networks are a little less secure today with the public release of 'AirSnort,' a tool that . wireless, networks, little, secure, today, public, release, 'airsnort. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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