Online payment firm PayPal announced that the company will offer a hardware key fob to users as an additional way of securing their accounts. The PayPal Security Key generates a new six-digit number every 30 seconds and displays the number when a button is pressed. Users that pay $5, a fee that is waived for business customers, will receive a key that they can then register to their account. . The company made the announcement last week at the RSA Security Conference, saying that the offering in the United States is a "public beta." The security key is the latest measure by the company to help lock down its users, Michael Barrett, chief information security officer for the subsidiary of eBay, told SecurityFocus. The link for this article located at SecurityFocus is no longer available. . Square unveils a biometric security device that verifies user identity through fingerprint authentication, providing seamless access to accounts.. PayPal Security Key, account protection, authentication method, hardware token. . Bill Locke
An online credit card processing company grudgingly admitted Thursday that a cache of passwords apparently stolen from its own system has resulted in hacker break-ins at hundreds - maybe thousands - of other servers across the Net. And some Internet . . . . An online credit card processing company grudgingly admitted Thursday that a cache of passwords apparently stolen from its own system has resulted in hacker break-ins at hundreds - maybe thousands - of other servers across the Net. And some Internet service providers (ISPs) are angry that it took CCBill of Tempe, Ariz., nearly three days to finally admit to customers that there may be a security problem, despite substantial evidence that its clients appeared uniquely vulnerable to the rash of system break-ins first uncovered Monday. Dayne Jordan, a partner at Columbus, Ohio, Web-hosting company CompleteWeb, said attackers appear to have wielded the user IDs and passwords of legitimate ISP customers to enter Unix-flavored servers and install software capable of logging on to an Internet relay chat (IRC) channel to await further commands. Similar IRC-controlled "bots" have been used in the past to command small armies of zombie computers in distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks. The link for this article located at Newsbytes is no longer available. . A digital payment gateway company reported that compromised passwords resulted in unauthorized access to their servers and increased vulnerability to DDoS attacks affecting their clientele.. Password Theft, Server Compromise, DDoS Attack, Security Threat. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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