Smugness levels cut among Apple fanbois Security firm Bitdefender has issued an alert about a malicious app that hands over control of Macs to criminals via Tor.…
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EasyDoc malware adds Tor backdoor to Macs for botnet control
Smugness levels cut among Apple fanbois Security firm Bitdefender has issued an alert about a malicious app that hands over control of Macs to criminals via Tor.…
Originally posted here:
EasyDoc malware adds Tor backdoor to Macs for botnet control
New research has revealed that DNS attacks are costing businesses more than $1 million a year in lost business and service downtime. For years, DNS has silently and peacefully served internet needs, but it’s mostly been thought of as a trivial protocol requiring very basic configuration and monitoring. Despite its criticality, this service has never really been considered as a potential security issue, mostly because common usage leads people to believe it is a trivial protocol requiring very basic confguration and monitoring. But while DNS may have been safe and apparently secure for the last twenty years, because of its complexity and evolving role in the IT industry it has become a powerful attack vector, with 91% of malware using the DNS protocol. According to the new study from IDC and EfficientIP , the top three DNS attacks that have the largest impact on an organisation are Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS attacks, Zero-Day vulnerabilities and data exfiltration. These types of attacks are the main cause of business outage and data theft. But despite 74% being victims of DNS attacks, 25% of businesses still aren’t implementing any kind of basic security software. EfficientIP’s experts warn that existing DNS defenses are outdated and no longer work. Until now, the approach to IT Security has been one that has downplayed the risk of DNS threats, bundling them in with a wide selection of diferent network threats that can be protected using traditional security tools and techniques. It is an approach that threatens DNS security by overcomplicating architectures, adding slow and inappropriate layers of defence. While firewalls can protect on a basic level, on their own they;re not designed to deal with high bandwidth DDoS attacks, or detect DNS tunnelling attempts (the majority of DDoS attacks are now over 1Gbps), and most businesses still rely on the ‘out-of-the-box’ non-secure DNS servers offered by Microsoft or Linux servers. ‘The report has highlighted that despite the massive increase in cyber attacks, companies and their IT departments still don’t fully appreciate the risks from DNS-based attacks,’ said David Williamson, EfficientIP CEO. ‘In just under two years GDPR will come into effect and companies will be held responsible for all security breaches and could face major fines. It’s crucial for all businesses to start taking DNS security seriously.’ Source: http://www.information-age.com/technology/security/123461604/dns-attacks-cost-businesses-more-1-million-year-study
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DNS attacks cost businesses more than $1 million a year
Last week HSBC’s online banking website was taken down by a DDoS attack, leaving thousands of customers unable to access its services. Here are some of the comments Help Net Security received. …
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Reactions to the HSBC DDoS attack
It’s like pulling a smoking car off the road… Oh, hang on Last December, Microsoft intercepted traffic on users’ PCs and helped break up a botnet. And nobody complained. So the company very tentatively asked at a session on ethics and policy in Brussels this week whether it should do more.…
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Microsoft asks: We’ve taken down botnets for you. How about a kill switch?
Malicious guest could eat your virtual rigs from the inside The Xen Project has reported a new bug, XSA-169 , that means “A malicious guest could cause repeated logging to the hypervisor console, leading to a Denial of Service attack.”…
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Xen Project blunder blows own embargo with premature bug report
When bragging of your illegal exploits, leave off your real name A UK man has been given eight and a half months in prison for launching a series of distributed denial-of-service attacks in 2013.…
Concerted assaults on five providers and counting FastMail has become the latest web services company to get taken down by distributed denial of service (DDoS) raiders who are trying to extort Bitcoins in exchange for internet access.…
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FastMail falls over as web service extortionists widen attacks and up their prices
Untrustworthy criminals … who’d have thought? After a crushing distributed denial of service attack against its servers and ISPs, secure email service ProtonMail says it has paid the ransom demanded by its attackers – who promptly stiffed the Swiss firm.…
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ProtonMail pays ransom to end web tsunami – still gets washed offline
Incapsula researchers have uncovered a botnet consisting of some 9,000 CCTV cameras located around the world, which was being used to target, among others, one of the company's clients with HTTP flood…
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CCTV botnets proliferate due to unchanged default factory credentials
Hacker fingered for heroin stunt takes the stand A Ukrainian man extradited from Italy has gone on trial in New Jersey accused of running a botnet and dealing in stolen credit cards.…
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Alleged Ukrainian botnet herder faces 43 years after Italian job snafu