Monday 21 March 2011

Did hackers nab RSA SecurID's secret sauce?

The RSA Hack FAQ | Anonymous: Why does U.S. Central Command want to create phony online identities?

Network World Security

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Did hackers nab RSA SecurID's secret sauce?
RSA is scrambling to reaffirm that the strength of its SecurID technology is not diminished. Read More


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QualysGuard Security & Compliance Suite Trial
The 14-day Trial includes: • Unlimited network mapping and discovery • Unlimited network perimeter scans • PCI Compliance scanning • Web application security scanning • IT security policy creation, scanning and reporting Sign up for your free trial today! Learn more!

WHITE PAPER: CA

Total Economic Impact of CA Identity Manager
This Forrester Consulting research demonstrates that companies using CA Identity Manager reduced the time to perform user provisioning, converted 60% of password resets to user self-service, and reduced security risks. Read Forrester's analysis of the total economic impact and rapid ROI of CA IM. Learn More

The RSA Hack FAQ
In the aftermath of RSA saying that its SecureID two-factor authentication tokens may have been compromised in a data breach of the company's network, here are some key questions and answers about the situation. Read More

Anonymous: Why does U.S. Central Command want to create phony online identities?
The international collective known as Anonymous is trying to figure out just what U.S. Central Command wants with software that can create and manage phony identities on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and other social networks. Read More


WEBCAST: CA

Fast-track Your Success with Private Clouds
In this webcast you will learn how to kick-start private cloud initiatives while addressing today's concerns: getting applications to market quickly while handling the requirements around performance and scalability, uncompromised security, application portability and interoperability with public clouds. Learn More

With Rustock, a new twist on fighting Internet crime
For more than 24 hours this week, it was a question that very few security experts could answer: Who had knocked the world's worst spam botnet offline? Read More

Hackers exploit Flash zero-day, Adobe confirms
Adobe today confirmed that attackers are exploiting an unpatched bug in Flash Player using Microsoft Excel documents. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Dell

The Business Case for Security Information Management
It is a mistake to assume that information security is solely a technical problem left for IT to solve. This guide is a non-technical discussion of security information management. Learn more.

Gigantic changes keep space technology hot
NASA's Mercury mission, Space Shuttle retirement dominate very busy space season Read More

Sunshine Week: Shining FOIA Light on Government Secrecy
Happy Sunshine Week - a week devoted to "the public's right to know what its government is doing, and why." Reports on transparency and accountability of federal agencies.Happy Sunshine Week - a week devoted to "the public's right to know what its government is doing, and why." The best way to accomplish that is to shine a huge Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) light on the shady shroud of secrecy surrounding some government tactics and hold those officials accountable for their actions. (function() { var s = document.createElement('SCRIPT'), s1 = document.getElementsByTagName('SCRIPT')[0]; ... Read More

Covert Cameras Designed to Spy on You
Feeling paranoid and wondering if someone is watching you? Cameras that resemble gum packages, shavers, and even handheld vacuums make spying all too easy. Read More



GOODIES FROM THE SUBNETS
Up for grabs from Microsoft Subnet: a Windows 7 Enterprise Technician class for three people. From Cisco Subnet: 15 copies of VMware ESXi books. Enter here.

SLIDESHOWS

Perks drive up pay for tech CEOs
Many tech vendors have shied away from extravagant perks, but there are still plenty worth highlighting. Like a $1.5 million tab for home security. Or how about the $36,619 one company paid to reimburse its CEO for the taxes he had to pay on the $106,589 he gained by using company aircraft for personal flights? Read on to find out which tech CEOs enjoyed the priciest perks in 2010 and which ones went to work perk-free.

First look at Microsoft Internet Explorer 9
Microsoft has a real competitor once again with IE9, released at midnight Monday night on Windows 7 and Vista after several months of beta testing. The focus is on speed, privacy and simplicity, with a stripped-down interface, tracking protection, pinned sites, jump lists and enhanced support for HTML5.

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  6. Web users bury Yahoo for botched Nate Dogg obit photo
  7. iPad 2 demand still exceeds supply
  8. Why does U.S. Cen Com want to create phony online identities?
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