FYI- ‘Here you have’ e-mail worm spreads quickly
IDG News Service - Security experts warned Thursday of a fast-spreading e-mail worm, the first large outbreak of this type in nearly a decade. The worm appears in e-mail messages with the subject “Here...
View ArticleHacker claims ‘Here you have’ worm designed to be a propaganda tool
IDG News Service – A hacker who claims he was behind a fast-spreading e-mail worm that crippled corporate networks last week said that the worm was designed, in part, as a propaganda tool. The hacker,...
View ArticleStuxnet worm is a “groundbreaking” piece of malware
Although this isn’t exactly a mobile issue, this malware is worth noting. On the other hand, the infection is easily spread through USB drives and as such could be transfered through mobile devices...
View ArticleSymantec say they have discovered how the Stuxnet worm manages to re-infect a...
The Stuxnet worm continues to make headlines, most recently with reports that computers at an Iranian nuclear power plant have been infected, potentially giving hackers the ability to access...
View ArticleOpera Software and Netsweeper partner to offer mobile operators increased...
San Francisco – October 6, 2010 Opera Software and Netsweeper, Inc., have announced today a partnership that will provide added security and Internet content filtering to operators who ship and...
View ArticleCybercriminals start to figure out how to make money by hacking mobile devices.
At Siteminis, we have seen this coming for a while, cypercriminals looking at mobile as a potential cash cow for scams. Companies such as Opera are partnering up with Netsweeper to provide added...
View ArticleNew software called ‘Blade’ short for Block All Drive-By Download Exploits is...
Although not specific to mobile- yet, these types of security software solutions will eventually migrate to mobile (ScienceDaily and Ga Tech) Insecure Web browsers and the growing number of complex...
View ArticleSymantec researchers uncovered new clues about the Stuxnet worm- The most...
(Computer World) Researchers have uncovered new clues that the Stuxnet worm may have been created to sabotage Iranian attempts to turn uranium into atomic bomb-grade fuel. According to Eric Chien, one...
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