Friday, July 20, 2007

Mac worm author receives death threats, vanishes from blogosphere

Network World

Security News Alert




Network World's Security News Alert, 07/20/07

Mac worm author receives death threats, 07/19/07: The beef over news of a worm targeting Macs, and the identity of the researcher who claimed to have created the malware, took an even stranger turn Wednesday as death threats were allegedly posted to his or her blog, which was then reportedly hacked.

Mac worm hacker vanishes from blogosphere, 07/18/07: Just days after claiming to have written a worm that could be used to attack Mac OS X systems, the anonymous blogger known as Infosecsellout has gone quiet.

IBM's India lab develops disaster management tool, 07/20/07: IBM's India Research Laboratory has developed the Resiliency Maturity Index (RMI), a framework that quantitatively assesses the ability of an organization to recover from a variety of disasters such as floods, power outages, software glitches, epidemics, and terrorist attacks.

Network World Buyers Guides

Find the right products for your enterprise - fast. With seven categories - security, storage, convergence and VoIP, network infrastructure, network applications, wireless and LAN/WAN management - you can quickly pinpoint the hardware or software you need. With the side-by-side comparison tool you can evaluate product features and make the best purchase decisions for your enterprise.

Click here to go to the Buyers Guides now.

Hackers use Brazilian plane crash to push malware, 07/18/07: Hackers haven't wasted any time exploiting the airplane crash in Sao Paulo, Brazil that claimed nearly 190 deaths Tuesday, a U.S. security company said Wednesday.

Microsoft reveals its identity management strategy: Microsoft Subnet blogger and security expert, Tyson Kopczynski, discusses the newly revealed Certificate Lifecycle Manager 2007. His conclusion so far, he says, is one of “’pleasant surprise’ with some shortcomings.”

Health experts: E-health records privacy rules needed, 07/18/07: The U.S. needs new medical privacy rules as the country moves toward greater use of IT to store health records, a group of healthcare experts said Wednesday.

TODAY'S MOST-READ STORIES:

1. 12 IT skills that employers can't say no to
2. iPhones flood WLAN at Duke University
3. Unmanned aircraft crush worldwide enemies
4. Readers speculate on Duke's iPhone problem
5. The trials of the Hogwarts IT director
6. Firefox update fixes problem with IE
7. Is IT losing the battle against DNS attacks?
8. Xbox chief: Departure is unrelated to console troubles
9. Microsoft’s services transition an uphill climb
10. Workaround puts Skype on the iPhone

MOST DOWNLOADED PODCAST:
LinuxCast: Samba goes GPLv3


Contact the author:

Senior Editor Ellen Messmer covers security for Network World. E-mail Ellen.



BONUS FEATURE

IT PRODUCT RESEARCH AT YOUR FINGERTIPS

Get detailed information on thousands of products, conduct side-by-side comparisons and read product test and review results with Network World’s IT Buyer’s Guides. Find the best solution faster than ever with over 100 distinct categories across the security, storage, management, wireless, infrastructure and convergence markets. Click here for details.


PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE
You've got the technology snapshot of your choice delivered to your inbox each day. Extend your knowledge with a print subscription to the Network World newsweekly, Apply here today.

International subscribers, click here.


SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES

To subscribe or unsubscribe to any Network World newsletter, change your e-mail address or contact us, click here.

This message was sent to: security.world@gmail.com. Please use this address when modifying your subscription.


Advertising information: Write to Associate Publisher Online Susan Cardoza

Network World, Inc., 118 Turnpike Road, Southborough, MA 01772

Copyright Network World, Inc., 2007

No comments:

Post a Comment