Austrian police to use crime-busting Trojans
The Austrian Police has become the latest European agency to express its intention to use specially-crafted Trojans to remotely monitor criminal suspects.
The Austrian Police has become the latest European agency to express its intention to use specially-crafted Trojans to remotely monitor criminal suspects.
The boffins at Xerox PARC (Palo Alto Research Center) have demonstrated a way to encrypt sections of a document so that sensitive information can be shielded from unauthorized readers.
Patch management company PatchLink is no more, but its demise is not bad news. The company has changed its name to Lumension Security.
Buffalo Technology has announced a range of portable hard drives using a new technology claimed to significantly boost performance compared to ordinary USB 2.0 products.
Wireless technology is now a major worry for most companies, so much so that many predict security spending rising by up to 20 percent to patch up its weaknesses.
Skype has launched a package for small businesses in Europe that bundles up the company's software with call credits and subscriptions for multiple users.
Skype is an easy target for hacking and offers a way inside a corporate network.
Security vendor Finjan has claimed the credit for spotting an embarrassing flaw in Windows Vista, which Microsoft only patched this week in its monthly updates.
A penetration test of U.K. corporate VPNs has offered decidedly mixed news on security.
Four years after it bought Linksys, Cisco has finally decided to kill the well-known brand name.
Russia has been used as the launch-pad for a new wave of cyberattacks aimed at a number of political and media organizations within the country.
E-mail worms, not long ago the scourge of the Internet, have declined sharply in 2007, a security company has revealed.
Expensive PCs were supposed be a thing of the past, but Sony has clearly not heard the news. The company has just announced what must be the most expensive non-gaming PC of the year, the US$5,000 RM1N.
Adware company Zango has lost the first part of its legal battle to stop anti-malware company PC Tools flagging its software as potentially troublesome adware.
A new and unusually sophisticated application for controlling and monitoring botnet PCs has been discovered by security company Panda Software.