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December 2, 2008 7:26:46 AM CST



Cybercrime track this thread

Started by K Schwartz; Last updated by D Lim | View history

Cybercrime

"This is our world now... the world of the electron and the switch, the beauty of the baud." -The Hacker Manifesto

Stories

Stories 21 - 40 of 54

  • June 2008
    • In One Domain, Anyway, Man Still Conquers Machine

      In One Domain, Anyway, Man Still Conquers Machine

      (Newser) - Every web user has come across CAPTCHAs: wavy-lettered depiction of words you must retype as text. Most pay them no mind, but, Lev Grossman writes in Time , we should reflect upon completing one. They're one of the rare visible skirmishes in the largely invisible war between spammers and security programmers. But besides that, they are quite literally tests of our humanity. More »

    • Surfers Beware: Danger Could Lurk at .hk, .cn

      Surfers Beware: Danger Could Lurk at .hk, .cn

      (Newser) - A study by antivirus software firm McAfee warns Web surfers to be cautious of sites on certain domains, the AP reports, with corner-cutting registration companies often skipping security precautions. The domains .hk, .cn and .info were found to be riskiest. More »

  • May 2008
    • Comcast Hackers: Company Dismissed Our Warning

      Comcast Hackers: Company Dismissed Our Warning

      (Newser) - Two teens who wrested control of Comcast’s homepage and webmail for 5 hours yesterday say they warned the company before the hijacking but were brushed off. In an interview with Wired , the two anonymous teens were triumphant about their assault on the ISP but expected to be arrested. “I wish I was a minor right now because this is going to be really bad,” said 19-year-old Defiant. More »

  • March 2008
    • Massive Data Theft Breached 'Secure' Network

      Massive Data Theft Breached 'Secure' Network

      (Newser) - High-tech thieves were able to penetrate what experts called an especially secure computer network when they stole 4.2 million credit and debit card numbers from the Hannaford and Sweetbay grocery chains. Unlike stores that send data over wireless networks, the supermarkets used a theoretically less porous fiber-optic cable. More »

    • US General: China Is Hacking Us

      US General: China Is Hacking Us

      (Newser) - Following up on a Pentagon report, a US commander said today that Chinese hackers increasingly target American military networks, the Wall Street Journal reports. Kevin Chilton, the general in charge of cyberspace, fell short of accusing Beijing but said, "You can kind of connect the dots." China has blasted a recent Pentagon report that describes the Chinese army's expanding cyberspace operations. More »

  • January 2008
    • Cybercrooks Hacking Power Grid

      Cybercrooks Hacking Power Grid

      (Newser) - Foreign extortionists have managed to hack into US power grids and shut them down, PC World reports, citing a CIA analyst speaking at a security conference this week. "In at least one case, the disruption caused a power outage affecting multiple cities. We do not know who executed these attacks, but all involved intrusions through the Internet," the analyst said. More »

    • Flash Attack Could Turn Routers Into Zombies

      Flash Attack Could Turn Routers Into Zombies

      (Newser) - Security experts have demonstrated how attackers could use Flash software and the Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) protocol to hijack their home routers, reports PC World . Users exposed to a malicious Flash file could have the servers they're trying to reach changed remotely and secretly, meaning a fraudster could redirect the user to phony bank or e-commerce websites even if they typed the right address into their browser. More »

    • Malware Is Outpacing Anti-Virus Apps

      Malware Is Outpacing Anti-Virus Apps

      (Newser) - Malware is trumping anti-virus apps these days, and even using them to stay ahead of security teams. A recent test by PC World reported that security suites spotted only one in four infiltrators because "the bad guys have the element of surprise," one McAfee expert said. "Bad guys" also test viruses on freeware sites like VirusTotal.com, which scans iffy files against 30 antivirus apps; if the virus passes, it's sure to confound experts for days. More »

  • December 2007
    • Theft of Personal Data Hits Record

      Theft of Personal Data Hits Record

      (Newser) - Theft of sensitive personal data such as Social Security and credit card information from corporations, government offices and other institutions hit a record this year, reports AP. One survey found 79 million records compromised in the US—nearly four times as many reported in 2006. Another study cited over 162 million data breaches worldwide this year. More »

    • Latest Domain Name Hack Disguises Its Danger

      Latest Domain Name Hack Disguises Its Danger

      (Newser) - The misdirection of “open-recursive” DNS servers, which facilitate web-surfing by translating verbal domain names into numerical IP addresses, is the new, more covert face of cyber-criminality, and could explode into a new wave of phishing attacks, IDG News reports. Hackers can use these types of DNS servers to redirect a web user to pages of their choosing, regardless of the web address they entered. More »

    • Cyberattack on US Nuclear Lab Linked to China

      Cyberattack on US Nuclear Lab Linked to China

      (Newser) - The coordinated cyberattack into the nonclassified portion of a US nuclear laboratory may have originated in China, says a Homeland Security memo obtained by the New York Times . The memo includes a list of offending internet addresses associated with locations in China, but points out that hackers commonly bounce their signal off of compromised computers to obscure their trail. More »

    • Hackers Breach Security at 2 US Nuclear Labs

      Hackers Breach Security at 2 US Nuclear Labs

      (Newser) - A US nuclear lab has been the target of a coordinated cyberattack that may have exposed the personal information of thousands of visitors, reports ABC News. Hackers broke into the nonclassified part of the computer system at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, a research facility in Tennessee, and made over 1,000 attempts to steal data. The attack seems to be part of a coordinated effort against labs across the country. More »

    • Pro Hackers Take Bite At Apple

      Pro Hackers Take Bite At Apple

      (Newser) - Apple computer users are being threatened by malicious hackers, according to computer security experts. The Financial Times reports security researchers have discovered an increase in the number of malicious programs in recent months that are specifically designed to attack Apple computers. The threat puts a question mark on Apple's reputation for safety. More »

    • Teen Nabbed for $26M 'Net Heist

      Teen Nabbed for $26M 'Net Heist

      (Newser) - The computer ace behind a $26 million worldwide identity theft heist is only 18, police said today, after nabbing New Zealander Owen Whyte. The teen allegedly wrote a ‘spybot’ program which stole financial data from more than a million computers. Police called him “one of the most skilled people in the world [at writing] this sort of malicious software.” More »

  • November 2007
    • Google Wants You! - to Help Stop Malicious Web Sites

      Google Wants You! - to Help Stop Malicious Web Sites

      (Newser) - Google is enlisting Web users in the hunt for sites hosting malicious code aimed at infecting visitors' computers. The internet giant has created an online form where Web surfers can report suspect sites, says PC World . Google searches that display sites the company believes are malicious show a warning, and Google has deleted some such sites from its index. More »

    • NZ Teenager Is Alleged Hacker Mastermind

      NZ Teenager Is Alleged Hacker Mastermind

      (Newser) - New Zealand police working with FBI today took into custody an 18-year-old accused of leading a cybercrime network responsible for $20 million worth of damage. Known by the name “AKILL,” the alleged teenaged mastermind wrote software that could control computers and then sold his skills to other hackers. Police questioned and then released the suspect, who was a minor when his alleged offenses began, AP reports.  More »

    • Hacker Blitz Infects Web Search Results

      Hacker Blitz Infects Web Search Results

      (Newser) - Software security firms believe they uncovered a massive hacker effort earlier this week to "booby-trap" web searches, one which could have rendered Windows and Internet Explorer users vulnerable to fraud. Seemingly innocuous and random search terms, like "Christmas gifts" and "infinity," brought results that included links thousands of malicious China-registered websites, built to fool search engine page rank algorithms.