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Online Security, a global provider of computer forensics and information technology risk mitigation since 1997
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Original Source: www.newsbits.net
August 4, 2004 - News Author: Deputy Ron Levine
NewsBits for August 4, 2004
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Three plead guilty to trying to hack into Lowe's computer
Three Michigan men have pleaded guilty to charges
that they conspired to hack into the national
computer system of the Lowe's home improvement
chain to steal credit card information, federal
authorities said Wednesday. Under plea agreements,
Brian Salcedo, Adam Botbyl and Paul Timmins
pleaded guilty to just handful of the 16 charges
each man originally faced, the U.S. Attorney's
office said.
http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/editorial/9320081.htm
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/computersecurity/2004-08-04-lowes-hackers-guilty_x.htm
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57 cuffed in UK anti-piracy crackdown
UK anti-piracy investigators arrested 57 people
last weekend in a nationwide crackdown targeting
music, film and computer game piracy. Many of
those arrested as part of Operation Zouk could
face benefit fraud charges along with copyright
offences ¡V 45 of those collared were on benefits.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/08/04/operation_zouk_piracy_crackdown/
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Al-Qaeda computer whizz was top terror planner
The Pakistani Al-Qaeda computer expert captured
last month was one of the terror network's top
planners with a five million dollar bounty on his
head and had plotted to attack London's Heathrow
airport, a senior security official said. Mohammad
Naeem Noor Khan, 25, alias Abu Talha, arrested in
the eastern city of Lahore on July 12, "is in the
top hierarchy of Al-Qaeda's external operations
wing," a security official closely involved in
Pakistan's latest Al-Qaeda swoop told AFP.
http://www.crime-research.org/news/04.08.2004/544/
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Latest MyDoom hunts victims via Yahoo!
Another new version of the MyDoom worm is spreading,
and like last week's variant it uses Yahoo! as part
of its infection routine. MyDoom-Q is similar to
earlier MyDoom variants. It normally spreads via
email, with a spoofed sending address and a variety
of different subject lines. The body of an infected
email contains random sentences, some of which refer
to the attached Zip file that contains viral code.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/08/04/mydoom_targets_yahoo/
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FCC wants VoIP to include a back door for bugging
Internet phone calls should be subject to the same
type of law enforcement surveillance as cell and
landline phones, federal regulators said Wednesday.
The Federal Communications Commission voted for
proposed rules that would require Internet service
providers to ensure their equipment will allow
police wiretaps.
http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/editorial/9319855.htm
http://news.com.com/Feds+back+Internet+wiretapping+rules/2100-7352_3-5296417.html
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5603020/
FCC rules on TiVo, wiretaps
http://news.com.com/FCC+rules+on+TiVo%2C+wiretaps/2009-1030_3-5296770.html
Ashcroft wins Internet wiretap system
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/9263
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321 Studios Shuts Down Due to Legal Pressure
321 Studios, which argued that customers had
a right to use its software to make back-up
copies of their legally purchased games and
movies, has been forced to shut down after
several entertainment companies took the firm
to court. 321 Studios produced products that
disabled copy-protection code.
http://www.newsfactor.com/story.xhtml?story_title=----Studios-Shuts-Down-Due-to-Legal-Pressure-&story_id=26170
http://www.wired.com/news/digiwood/0,1412,64453,00.html
Study: Phishing attacks up by 50% per month
http://computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,95029,00.html
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Cybersleuths track Dame Porter¡¦s millions
Computer forensics played an important role in
Westminster City Council¡¦s fight to recover the
?36m surcharge imposed on Dame Shirley Porter
for her role in the 1980s ¡¥homes for votes¡¦
scandal, it emerged this week. Evidence unearthed
by forensics experts at Vogon International helped
city law firm Stephenson Harwood in tracking
Dame Porter¡¦s assets.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/08/04/vogon_traces_porter_dosh/
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Cyber Cops to Monitor Internet in Vietnam
A new police unit will start cracking down on
Internet criminals next month as communist Vietnam
works to maintain control over its growing number
of online users. The special unit, under the Ministry
of Public Security, will focus on crimes such as
credit card fraud, hacking, gambling and posting
banned information online, the Vietnam News
reported Wednesday.
http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/editorial/9317648.htm
http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/internet/08/04/vietnam.internet.reut/index.html
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9/11 report light on ID theft issues
In a world where 10 million people a year can
have their identity stolen, where pretending
to be someone else is as easy as stealing a
wallet, what good are traveler databases and
terrorist watch lists? After all, they are
easily foiled by impersonation. But in the
nation's most comprehensive look yet at what
went wrong on Sept. 11., and what can be done
to prevent the next terrorist attack, identity
theft gets scarce mention. Buried deep within
the 9/11 commission report ¡X on about 10 pages,
starting with page 393 ¡X are suggestions for
dealing with the deeply connected problems
of terrorism and identity fraud.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5594385/
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Fingerprinting Your Files
"Hash" functions identify digital content with
mathematical certainty¡Xbut is that enough to
foil the hackers? Three cryptographers at Stanford
University recently came up with a clever solution
to the persistent problem of identity theft on the
Internet. Wily hackers in Russia, China, and other
countries send out piles of e-mail messages looking
like they came from some financial institution such
as Citibank or Paypal. Millions of consumers get
these messages, which have embedded HTML links in
them that take the unsuspecting recipient to look-
alike websites run in faraway places.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/04/08/wo_garfinkel080404.asp
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Deploying Network Access Quarantine Control (part 1 of 2)
One of the easiest and arguably most prevalent
ways for nefarious software or Internet users
to creep onto your network is not through holes
in your firewall, or brute force password attacks,
or anything else that might occur at your corporate
headquarters or campus. It's through your mobile
users, when they try to connect to your business
network while on the road.
http://www.securityfocus.com/infocus/1794
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Porno blog spam turns nasty
Blog spamming is turning nasty. First spotted
approximately a year ago, blog spam involves the
automated posting of Web address onto weblogs
or online discussion boards. Spam comments
deposited using the technique include a link to
a spamvertised website. The idea is not so much
to get visitors to a spammed location to visit
the promoted site but to increase its page rankings
in Google. This, in turn, increases the prominence
of the site in certain searches and therefore
increases the likelihood that more visitors will
visit a site. That's the theory anyway.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/08/04/porno_blog_spam/
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