Kamis, 02 Februari 2012

HTC Android phones can leak Wi-Fi passwords

Business is booming for 'malware as a service' merchants | Symantec recants Android malware claims

InfoWorld's Security Central

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HTC Android phones can leak Wi-Fi passwords
A group of HTC Android phones is susceptible to an exploit that can steal Wi-Fi credentials and passwords and send them to attackers. The affected Android builds expose 802.1X passwords to applications on the phones that have permission to access the Wi-Fi state of the phone. Read More


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Business is booming for 'malware as a service' merchants
They are well organized. They pay close attention to product quality, working hard to make it effective and scalable. They are all about customer service, providing after-sales support. They even solicit the help of their customers in product development. All in the service of theft. Read More

Symantec recants Android malware claims
Symantec has backtracked from assertions last week that 13 Android apps distributed by Google's Android Market were malicious, and now says that the code in question comes from an aggressive ad network that provides revenue to the smartphone programs. Read More

Symantec drops don't-use advice, gives pcAnywhere all-clear
Symantec spokesman Brian Modena declined to declare the now-patched pcAnywhere as safe to use when asked that question multiple times, but hinted that the fixes the company has released were sufficient. Read More

End-to-end encryption: The PCI security Holy Grail
With groups like Anonymous actively looking to embarrass your company, laptops thefts occurring every second, and the recent poor U.S. District Court ruling on fifth amendment password protection rights, it is time you actually encrypt your data properly. Read More



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