Have you heard about the new attack that German academics have developed that can extract and steal data from encrypted PDF files, sometimes without user interaction? Learn more: . Named PDFex, the new attack comes in two variations and was successfully tested against 27 desktop and web PDF viewers, including popular software such as Adobe Acrobat, Foxit Reader, Evince, Nitro, and Chrome and Firefox's built-in PDF viewers. The attack doesn't target the encryption applied to a PDF document by external software, but the encryption schemes supported by the Portable Document Format (PDF) standard, itself. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Uncover the techniques behind the PDFex vulnerability, which takes advantage of the encryption features in PDF documents, impacting leading systems and posing risks to sensitive information.. PDFex Attack, Data Extraction, PDF Encryption, Document Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Via an encryption scheme that uses GPS satellites to track users' locations, Georgetown professor Dorothy Denning takes the copyright fight to Hollywood--and into the heavens. Now, Denning is pioneering a new type of copyright protection, called geo-encryption. It's a big deal . . . . Via an encryption scheme that uses GPS satellites to track users' locations, Georgetown professor Dorothy Denning takes the copyright fight to Hollywood--and into the heavens. Now, Denning is pioneering a new type of copyright protection, called geo-encryption. It's a big deal in the information security arena, earning her the moniker of "America's cyberwarrior" from Time magazine and stoking the imaginations of everyone from Hollywood movie executives seeking ways to scare off Napster copycats to hospital administrators looking for a safe way to transport patient data across the Internet without fear of privacy breaches. Today, of course, there's little to stop someone from posting the latest hit CD or DVD for anyone to download for free. But Denning thinks she's pretty much solved that problem. The link for this article located at CIO Insight is no longer available. . Via an encryption scheme that uses GPS satellites to track users' locations, Georgetown professor Do. encryption, scheme, satellites, track, users', locations, georgetown, professor. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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