The plot thickens. According to iDefense Labs, the recent Internet attack that has so upset Google affected 33 other US tech and defence firms and is directly related to an Adobe Reader-based attack of last July.. The US flaw-hunting specialist said that the attack was an attempt to steal source code on an industrial scale and was, in many cases, probably successful. If correct, this might explain why Google has by its own normally quite restrained standards gone ballistic to the extent of threatening to quit China. "Two independent, anonymous iDefense sources in the defense contracting and intelligence consulting community confirmed that both the source IPs and drop server of the attack correspond to a single foreign entity consisting either of agents of the Chinese state or proxies thereof," said the iDefense press statement, confirming what the world already knows. It now turns out that Adobe itself was targeted in the latest alleged Chinese attacks, as a statement on its own website explains. The link for this article located at Tech World is no longer available. . The US flaw-hunting specialist said that the attack was an attempt to steal source code on an indust. thickens, according, idefense, recent, internet, attack, upset, google. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
This month. Around 15 new exploits are scheduled to be discussed, according to conference organisers. Last year, Cisco issued a lawsuit against the organisers after one of its former employees demonstrated a serious security hole in its routing technology. . Approximately 20 fresh vulnerabilities are set to be unveiled at Def Con 2023, shedding light on severe security issues examined by specialists.. Black Hat Conference, Exploit Discovery, Cisco Security, Security Flaws. . Brittany Day
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