Attackers don't just lay traps for users; they do it for researchers and rivals as well. A recent case in point is an exploit toolkit linked to a Zeus malware campaign that security pros at The Last Line of Defense report includes a fake administration console that records information about anyone who attempts to access or hack it.. Such traps are not unfamiliar to security researchers. Cyber-crime is a business, and when defending that business, the best defense can be a good offense. "They have been doing this for some time, particularly bot-herders, to protect their botnets," said Jamz Yaneza, advanced threat manager at Trend Micro. "They employ monitoring scripts/stations that once [they] detect threat researchers are lurking ... then instruct the whole botnet The link for this article located at eWeek is no longer available. . Intruders set up sophisticated decoys to confuse cybersecurity analysts and safeguard their activities.. Malware Authors, Cyber Defense, Threat Intelligence. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
With VoIP devices finding their way into the majority of major enterprises and a significant number of residential installations, the possible consequences of a security vulnerability that can be leveraged by malicious hackers are ever increasing . VoIPER toolkit The link for this article located at Hackin9 is no longer available. . The VoIPER toolkit is essential for businesses aiming to strengthen their Voice over Internet Protocol systems against common security threats and risks. VoIP Security, Exploit Research Toolkit, Cyber Threat Management. . Bill Locke
A toolkit designed to exploit a recently-disclosed Microsoft JPEG vulnerability has been released onto the net. . . .. A toolkit designed to exploit a recently-disclosed Microsoft JPEG vulnerability has been released onto the net. The toolkit makes it trivially easy for maliciously-minded attackers, however unskilled they might be, to exploit unpatched Windows systems and run malicious code. The attack mechanism used here takes advantage of a recently discovered flaw in the way Microsoft applications process JPEG image files. Malformed JPEG files are capable of triggering a buffer overflow in a common Windows component (the GDI+ image viewing library), it was revealed last week. This behaviour creates a ready mechanism to inject exploit code into vulnerable systems. Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 make use of vulnerable library by default. Other Windows OSes might be vulnerable, depending on what applications users have installed. Microsoft, which unsurprisingly rates the vulnerability as critical, released a patch to defend against the flaw on 14 September. To be at risk, users have to open a JPEG file modified to trigger the flaw using either IE or Outlook. They also need to be unpatched. Unfortunately there's plenty of scope for both conditions to be met and the gene pool of potential victims is huge. The link for this article located at theregister.co.uk is no longer available. . A toolkit designed to exploit a recently-disclosed Microsoft JPEG vulnerability has been released on. toolkit, designed, exploit, recently-disclosed, microsoft, vulnerability, released. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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