From the department of cosmic justice comes this gem, spotted by researchers from Symantec: a trojan that targets Windows, Mac, and Linux computers contains gaping security vulnerabilities that allow rival criminal gangs to commandeer the infected machines.. Known as Trojan.Jnanabot, or alternately as OSX/Koobface.A or trojan.osx.boonana.a, the bot made waves in October when researchers discovered its Java-based makeup allowed it to attack Mac and Linux machines, not just Windows PCs as is the case with most malware. Once installed, the trojan components are stored in an invisible folder and use strong encryption to keep communications private. The bot can force its host to take instructions through internet relay chat, perform DDoS attacks, and post fraudulent messages to the victim's Facebook account, among other things. The link for this article located at The Register UK is no longer available. . Known as Trojan.Jnanabot, or alternately as OSX/Koobface.A or trojan.osx.boonana.a, the bot made wav. department, cosmic, justice, comes, spotted, researchers, symantec, trojan. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Recently, I stumbled upon this which nicely showed how a Trojan horse can, utilizing a key stroke capture and screenshot capture, grab a user. The link for this article located at SecuriTeam is no longer available. . Image-based virtual keyboards are popular security tools but can pose risks like phishing. Trojans may exploit them to capture keystrokes and steal personal data.. Image-Based Keyboards, Trojan Threats, Keylogging Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The way operating system vendors issue security patches is insecure, in many cases, and could let crackers exploit this to trick users into loading trojan horses onto their systems. Security firm BindView, whose Razor team of security researchers . . . . The way operating system vendors issue security patches is insecure, in many cases, and could let crackers exploit this to trick users into loading trojan horses onto their systems. Security firm BindView, whose Razor team of security researchers completed the research, questioned 27 different vendors of commonly used products on whether patches are accompanied by digital signatures or other forms of cryptographic authentication. Its findings, available in full here, are a real eye-opener because they highlight glaring security gaps, not least that a minority of vendors, including Apple and Compaq, provide no authentication for their patches. "A number of the vendors (including some Fortune 500 companies) do not offer patch authentication via any cryptographic method. This can make it very difficult for customers to verify that they have obtained a correct patch rather than a trojan horse," said Matt Power, of BindView's Razor security team. The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. . The way operating system vendors issue security patches is insecure, in many cases, and could let cr. operating, system, vendors, security, patches, insecure, cases. . Anthony Pell
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