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Private identities become a corporate focus
Technology companies at the RSA Security Conference expound on the privacy benefits of online services that authenticate users based on the least amount of information possible.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-02-20
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11377

Startup tries to spin a safer Web
Armed with client-side honeypots and a low-cost team in India, a group of MIT graduates aims to create a system to warn Web surfers about the seedier sites, and outright malicious servers, on the Internet.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-02-12
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11376

Apple's in the eye of flaw finders
With the move to Intel processors and a larger share of the market, Apple's Mac OS X could find itself a more popular target of attack, security professionals say.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-02-07
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11375

Blackmal virus set to delete files
Security experts urge companies to clean their networks of a malicious mass-mailing computer virus, before compromised systems reach the first trigger date and start deleting eleven types of files.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-02-01
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11374

Good worms back on the agenda
A researcher argues that the spreading capabilities of worms could better perform penetration testing inside networks, turning vulnerable systems into distributed scanners.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-01-27
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11373

Researchers: Rootkits headed for BIOS
UPDATE: Insider attacks and industrial espionage could become more stealthy by hiding code in the core system functions stored on the motherboard, researchers say.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-01-26
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11372

Zero-day details underscore criticism of Oracle
A security researcher releases detailed information about a critical vulnerability in Oracle's application and Web servers, taking the company to task for not fixing the issues quickly.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-01-25
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11371

Bot herder pleads guilty to 'zombie' sales
A 20-year-old California man plead guilty to federal charges that he sold access to networks of compromised PCs and made money from illicitly installed adware.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-01-23
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11370

Researcher: Sony BMG "rootkit" still widespread
Even as media giant Sony BMG settles six cases in New York, a security researcher finds hundreds of thousands of networks appear to still contain PCs with the controversial copy protection installed.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-01-16
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11369

Zero-day WMF flaw underscores patch problems
The Windows Meta File incident suggests that open-source efforts can result in quicker fixes but pose larger issues of trust, and highlights that companies can no longer depend on patches to protect their systems.
By: Robert Lemos, SecurityFocus 2006-01-12
http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11368

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