By confessing that its mistakes led to security breaches at three customers, Bit9 has sparked debate over whether the industry is ready to block hackers that see vendors as the door to other companies. . Bit9 disclosed last week that cybercriminals stole digital code-signing certificates from its computers and then used them to drop malware in the systems of three unidentified customers. The vendor acknowledged that the theft occurred on computers that it had failed to protect with its own product, which allows only software on a whitelist to run. The link for this article located at CSO is no longer available. . Bit9's revelation of a breach uncovers serious flaws in cybersecurity protocols and vendor responsibility.. Bit9 Breach, Cybercriminal Activity, Digital Certificates, Malware Incidents, Security Accountability. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A New York teenager broke into AOL networks and databases containing customer information and infected servers with a malicious program to transfer confidential data to his computer, AOL and the Manhattan District Attorney's Office allege. . In a complaint filed in Criminal Court of the City of New York, the DA's office alleges that between December 24, 2006 and April 7, 2007, 17-year old Mike Nieves committed offenses like computer tampering, computer trespass, and criminal possession of computer material. The link for this article located at InfoWorld is no longer available. . A California teenager reportedly breached Yahoo's servers, gaining unauthorized access to private user information and introducing viruses to their infrastructure.. Teen Hacking, AOL Breach, Malware Incident. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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