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Report: Nearly Half of Known Attacks Leverage Old Vulnerabilities

According to a recent report, companies are failing to properly patch and update their systems despite the disclosure of threatening vulnerabilities. The 2015 Cyber Risk Report (PDF) produced by HP analyzing last year’s threat landscape found that as many as 44 percent of breaches were the result of attackers leveraging a patched two- to four-year...
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Samba Vulnerability CVE-2015-0240 Detection & Remediation

Updated Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2015, 2:11 PM: Added content for Tripwire Enterprise customers to find Samba in their environment. A major vulnerability (CVE-2015-0240) has been discovered in Samba, which is a widely used and distributed SMB/CIFS Linux/Unix application for interoperability with Microsoft Windows. Samba provides integration of Linux...
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The Trouble with (Asset) Identity

Have you ever had your identity stolen? Or perhaps an identity crisis? I hope for your sake the answer is "no." However, if it's yes, you are in good company. Computing devices, which I'll loosely refer to as "assets," often change their identity, and at times even have it stolen (as a side note, NIST has a much broader definition of asset more...
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The Startup Problem

Last month, Michal Nemcok blogged about the lack of security in the Progressive Insurance diagnostic monitoring dongle. By hacking the monitoring device, someone may be able to gain access to and change the behavior of the car, itself. Now, this is serious stuff – vulnerabilities that might impact the operation of the thing that carries your body...
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Unconventional Security Conventions

In the face of the current wave of cyber threats, the U.S. government announced this week in Washington DC that as part of the Homeland Security initiative the current administration is creating a new agency called the Cyber Threat Intelligence Integration Centre (CTIIP) to monitor cybersecurity threats by acquiring, pooling and analysing any...
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VERT Threat Alert: February 2015 Patch Tuesday Analysis

Today’s VERT Alert addresses 9 new Microsoft Security Bulletins. VERT is actively working on coverage for these bulletins in order to meet our 24-hour SLA and expects to ship ASPL-601 on Wednesday, February 11. MS15-009 Multiple Memory Corruption Vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer MULTIPLE Multiple Elevation of Privilege...
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Microsoft Patches Dangerous Group Policy Vulnerability

In February’s Patch Tuesday, Microsoft issued an update to fix a privately reported critical vulnerability in Group Policy that could allow potential attackers to achieve remote code execution (RCE) in domain networks. If successfully exploited, an attacker could gain complete control of a vulnerable system, install programs, view data and even...
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11 Essential Bug Bounty Programs of 2015

With cybercrime and major hacking incidents reaching epidemic proportions, the importance of locating application-layer vulnerabilities is rising. Developers and companies are constantly striving to scan their code and improve code integrity in the early development stages, but no application is completely vulnerability-free and external scrutiny...
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Threat Intelligence: Reduce the Gap

Major cyber security incidents continue to hit the headlines. Security and privacy are top concerns for IT and security professionals, especially after 2014’s highly publicized data breaches. Companies around the globe were victim to malware, stolen data and exploited vulnerabilities. Big companies weren’t immune to this, with Target, JPMogan Chase,...
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The Year of The Hack

It seems only fitting that 2014 should have ended with the much publicized hacking of Sony as the American public was inundated all year with one sensational account after another of damaging data security breaches. Those surrounding Target, UPS, K-Mart, Staples, Dairy Queen and Home Depot have certainly received the full attention of the media, as...
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Microsoft Packing More CVEs into Fewer Security Bulletins

Patch Tuesday, the unofficial day on which Microsoft regularly releases security updates for its software products, has long been a staple of the information security community. On the second (and sometimes fourth) Tuesday of every month, Microsoft releases a unique set of security bulletins that provide patches for a range of new Common...
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Comparing Cross-site Scripting Vulnerabilities

Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities can, unfortunately, be found in all types of web-based applications. Indeed, they appear to be rather ubiquitous across the web. XSS falls into the category of code injection vulnerabilities and is a result of web-based applications consuming user-supplied input without proper filtering and sanitization....
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Ransomware: Refusing to Negotiate with Attackers

Last week, the information security community was saddened to learn of Joseph Edwards, a 17-year-old secondary school student who committed suicide after his computer became infected with ransomware. Edwards’ computer was corrupted by Reveton (or Police Ransomware), a common type of malware that locks a victim’s computer, claims that the victim is...
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Don’t be Shellshocked by GHOST

If you’re following threat feeds, you’ve probably heard about GHOST (CVE 2015-0235), the new critical vulnerability that Qualys disclosed yesterday. This vulnerability has been found in glibc, the GNU C library, and it affects all Linux systems dating back to 2000. Redhat listed it on their CVE database as ‘critical’ with a CVSS v2 score of 6.8....
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GHOST Vulnerability and Its Patch History

There’s a lot of chatter going on right now related to the GHOST vulnerability that was announced yesterday. Lots of folks are talking about the vulnerability, particularly focused on the threat advisory published by Qualys. However, I thought I would spend a little time looking at the history of this vulnerability and how its underlying bug was...
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GHOST in the Linux Machine – CVE-2015-0235

Researchers have discovered a critical vulnerability (CVE-2015-0235) in the Linux GNU C Library (glibc) that could potentially allow attackers to execute code on servers and gain remote control of Linux machines, without the necessary system credentials. This flaw is found in most versions of Linux, in which a buffer overflow can be exploited by...
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Marriott Customers' Personal Details Exposed by Simple Web Flaw

Here's a piece of advice for anyone responsible for securing a corporation's data: If you discover security researcher Randy Westergren is using your app, you had best take a long hard look at whether you are protecting your users' information properly. Because, if you're not, there's a good chance that he might be about to tell you what you're...