Santa Clara University's academic records database was recently hacked to improve the grades of more than 60 former and current undergraduate students, the university announced Monday. . The university called in the FBI, which is assisting in the ongoing investigation, according to university officials. No arrests have been reported. The link for this article located at Mercury News is no longer available. . Santa Clara University experiences grade modifications affecting 60 students; federal authorities probe into the breach of the academic records database.. Santa Clara University, Academic Security Breach, Database Investigation. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
IT security company Sense of Security has discovered a serious bug in Apache's HTTP web server, which could allow a remote attacker to gain complete control of a database. Discovered by the company's security consultant Brett Gervasoni, the vulnerability exists in Apache's core "mod_isapi" module. By exploiting the module, an attacker could remotely gain system privileges that would compromise data security.. Users of Apache 2.2.14 and earlier are advised to upgrade to Apache 2.2.15, which fixes the exploit. According to Sense of Security spokesperson Jason Edelstein, Apache is one of the most popular pieces of web server software used today and the vulnerability was one of the most significant bugs in Apache for years. "The vulnerability means that you can take complete control of the web server remotely with system privileges The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Update to Apache version 2.2.15 to address critical vulnerabilities granting external access to databases. Essential for system integrity!. Apache Update, System Control, Remote Access Bug. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Hackers broke into a University of Texas database and stole the names, Social Security numbers and e-mail addresses of more than 55,000 students, former students and employees, officials said. A preliminary evaluation found no evidence the information was used to . . . . Hackers broke into a University of Texas database and stole the names, Social Security numbers and e-mail addresses of more than 55,000 students, former students and employees, officials said. A preliminary evaluation found no evidence the information was used to illegally obtain credit cards or withdraw money from bank accounts, said Deputy U.S. Attorney Robert Pitman. School officials said they were notifying the victims. Travis County prosecutor Ronnie Earle said search warrants related to the case were served late Wednesday in Austin and Houston. No arrests had been made by Thursday afternoon. The theft was discovered Sunday when employees found a computer malfunction, according to Dan Updegrove, the university's vice president for information technology who described the incident on the school's Web site. The link for this article located at SecurityFocus is no longer available. . A significant security incident at Texas A&M revealed personal details, including names, birth dates, and phone numbers of more than 60,000 people.. University of Texas, hacker attack, data compromise, Social Security theft, information security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
ser lancilot writes, "The hacking group called The Deceptive Duo has hacked today into some military servers belonging to the Department of Defense (Defense Logistics Agency) gaining access to some databases and posting them to the defaced pages.. . .. ser lancilot writes, "The hacking group called The Deceptive Duo has hacked today into some military servers belonging to the Department of Defense (Defense Logistics Agency) gaining access to some databases and posting them to the defaced pages. As it can be easily checked here Those databases contain names, passwords, phone numbers and codes to presumed employees of the Department of Defence, including some codes which are referring to the database of some recorded conversations of the DoD employees (like the system which is in place to record the stock market purchase orders over the broker's phone). Zone-H is really concerned about the level of vulnerability demonstrated by strategic American structures, especially considering the possible risks that those vulnerability would introduce to the American national security. In fact, as claimed by the same Deceptive Duo, the attack was conducted over a period of 4 hours breaking the MSSQL database which was protected by the STANDARD installation password. . This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. writes,. email, address, being, protected, spambots, javascript, enabled, writes. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.