Archive for November, 2004

IT security is the industry

Sunday, November 7th, 2004

The national strategy to secure cyberspace is extremely important, but its implementation has been weak, says Cyber Security Industry Alliance of Washington leader Paul Kurtz, whose last post was special assistant to the president and senior director for critical infrastructure protection. Kurtz believes cybersecurity should be approached from a business-risk viewpoint, given that most of the owners and operators of critical infrastructure are members of the private sector. The government cannot and should not shoulder the entire burden of protecting cyberspace. Read full story.

Email ‘phishing’ scam compromises privacy

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2004

Phishing, according to webopedia.com is “the act of sending an e-mail to a user falsely claiming to be an established legitimate enterprise in an attempt to scam the user into surrendering private information that will be used for identity theft.” If the user takes the bait and assumes the email is legitimate, they are directed to a website where they are asked, under false pretenses, to reveal personal information like credit card numbers or account passwords.

Previously, all know phishing scams required the user to buy into the original fraudulent email and click on a link and then type in their information. However, a phishing scam that doesn’t require anything from a user other than opening an email has emerged. The email triggers a script that compromises the users computer so that the next time they attempt visit certain online banking sites they are re-directed to imposter websites that steal their personal information.

Fortunately, this attack only targets insecurely configured or out-of-date versions of Microsoft’s Outlook email program, but more sophisticated attacks are likely on the way. This is another example of why you need to keep your software up-to-date as well as consider unique vulnerabilities your particular email client or web browser may have. Personally, I would avoid Microsoft Outlook as well as Internet Explorer in favor of alternatives like Thunderbird and Firefox from mozilla.org.

Read more about this attack at silicon.com.