BERLIN, Germany . An annual event designed to showcase members The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . An annual event designed to showcase membersThe link for this article located at Wired is no longer . berlin, germany, annual, event, designed, showcase, membersthe, article, located. . Alex
No computer connected to a network is completely safe. Any computer that communicates with another, even occasionally, can fall victim to the threats that race around our interconnected world. Hackers live in any country. And the worms and viruses with the cute names -- Code Red, Blaster, Nimba, Slammer, Sobig -- don't recognize national borders.. . .. No computer connected to a network is completely safe. Any computer that communicates with another, even occasionally, can fall victim to the threats that race around our interconnected world. Hackers live in any country. And the worms and viruses with the cute names -- Code Red, Blaster, Nimba, Slammer, Sobig -- don't recognize national borders. "There's no difference between the Blaster that hits Europe or the United States," says Gene Fredriksen, VP of information security at financial-services firm Raymond James & Associates, which has offices in several foreign countries. "We all swim in the same pool." Cultures may differ and languages may vary, but the security threats IT systems around the world face are pretty much the same, according to the InformationWeek 2003 Global Information Security Survey of 2,500 business-technology and security professionals. And the tactics used to fend off those threats are similar the world over. First the good news. In the 12 months ending in July, virus, worm, and Trojan-horse attacks hit 45 percent of sites surveyed, down dramatically from 66 percent in the same period two years ago. Those kinds of attacks occurred more often in South America (55 percent) and the Asia-Pacific region (49 percent) than in North America (46 percent) and Europe (41 percent). About 15 percent of sites surveyed suffered denial-of-service attacks, the same as in 2001, but more businesses in Asia-Pacific (19 percent) and North America (19 percent) experienced such attacks than companies in South America (14 percent) or Europe (11 percent). The link for this article located at securitypipeline is no longer available. . In ourinterconnected world, the increasing vulnerabilities of networked computers raise significant concerns. With rising cyberattacks like malware and phishing, all entities face risks.. Cybersecurity Threats, Network Vulnerabilities, Global Security Challenges, Malware Incidents. . Anthony Pell
Servers based in South Korea and China are the most commonly used in attacks on the Internet, following servers housed in the United States, according to a study released Monday by an infrastructure consulting firm. Using its more than 50 . . . . Servers based in South Korea and China are the most commonly used in attacks on the Internet, following servers housed in the United States, according to a study released Monday by an infrastructure consulting firm. Using its more than 50 sensors around the Internet to study more than 12 million probes and attacks, New York-based Predictive Systems found that 49 percent of all attacks took advantage of servers in the United States, 17 percent used South Korean servers, and about 15 percent used servers based in China. While the results don't suggest which nations have the most hackers, they do indicate that unsecured infrastructure is often co-opted by attackers in other countries and poses a significant risk to others connected to the Internet, said Richard Smith, a senior information security analyst with Predictive. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Servers based in South Korea and China are the most commonly used in attacks on the Internet, follow. servers, based, south, korea, china, commonly, attacks, internet, follow. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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