Webappsec->General


From the Web

Gmail, AOL and Yahoo logins posted online; weak passwords

October 07, 2009 from: Office of Inadequate Security

More than a quarter of a million email accounts on the biggest webmail services are believed to be at risk from online criminals after thousands of passwords belonging to users of the Yahoo, AOL and Gmail services were posted online.

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Cloud/SaaS will do for websites what PCI-DSS has not

October 02, 2009 from: Jeremiah Grossman's Blog

If a would-be Cloud/Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) customer is concerned about security, and they should be since their business is on the line, then security should be the vendors concern as well. Unless the Cloud/SaaS vendor is able to meet a customer’s minimum requirements, they risk losing the business to a competitor who can.

Comments  (1)


From the Web

A Glimpse Into the Future of Browser Security

September 30, 2009 from: Mozilla Security Blog

As we mentioned earlier we’ve been working for the past few months on turning the Content Security Policy specification into working Firefox code. (You’ll remember that CSP is a framework to protect websites from XSS and related attacks). We are happy to report that the work is nearly finished, and we have some preview builds available for you to try out.

Comments  (0)


From the Web

What Star Trek Predicts About The Future of Information Security

September 18, 2009 from: Rsnake's blog at ha.ckers.org

I had a funny thought while talking with some folks from Intel about what the future state of of information security would look like and how that relates to what our favorite nerdy show, Star Trek, has to say on the topic. This is meant to be a funny post, but there may be some truth buried in here somewhere too. Without further ado:

Comments  (2)


From the Web

Man sentenced for micro-deposit scam

September 17, 2009 from: Office of Inadequate Security

A 22-year old man was sentenced to 15 months in prison and restitution of $200,073.44 for fraud and related activity in connection with computers. After release from prison, Michael Largent will also face three years of strict restrictions on his use of computers and the Internet.

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Plugin Updating Project: Follow up

September 16, 2009 from: Mozilla Security Blog

I wrote last week about a new project we’ve [Mozilla] started, informing our users when they’re running out of date versions of popular plugins. We focused our initial efforts on the Adobe Flash Player and now, a week after launch, Mozilla’s Numerator, Ken Kovash, has a blog post up looking at the results.

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Website exposes sensitive details on military personnel

September 08, 2009 from: Office of Inadequate Security

Programming errors on a website that helps commuters carpool to work are exposing sensitive information of workers for hundreds of employers in Southern California, including at least one military installation.

Comments  (1)


From the Web

Email Obfuscation and Spam Robots

September 08, 2009 from: Rsnake's blog at ha.ckers.org

I’ve long been interested in spam and robots that scrape for email addresses. I’ve done tons of work in the space, although I’ve never published any of it. Call it more of a side hobby than anything I really want to go public with - as it is with a lot of my research

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Helping users keep plugins updated

September 04, 2009 from: Mozilla Security Blog

Starting with the upcoming releases of Firefox 3.5.3 and Firefox 3.0.14, Mozilla will warn users if their version of the popular Adobe Flash Player plugin is out of date. Old versions of plugins can cause crashes and other stability problems, and can also be a significant security risk.

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Best of Application Security (Friday, Sep. 4)

September 04, 2009 from: Jeremiah Grossman's Blog

Ten of Application Security industry's coolest, most interesting, important, and entertaining links from the past week -- in no particular order. Regularly released until year end. Then the Best of Application Security 2009 will be selected!

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Why some Firefox users choose not to update

August 25, 2009 from: Mozilla Security Blog

The best way for users to stay safe online is to use an updated browser. While most Firefox users get updated quickly, some fall behind for various reasons. We’re looking for ways to increase uptake while still preserving user choice.

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Google Safe-Browsing and Chrome Privacy Leak

August 24, 2009 from: Rsnake's blog at ha.ckers.org

Some more advice from Robert "RSnake" Hansen on why you shoulld be careful if using Google's Chrome browser.

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Symantec names the 100 “Dirtiest” websites of the summer

August 22, 2009 from: Office of Inadequate Security

In an effort to determine which sites are safe to visit, security, storage and systems management solutions provider Symantec (www.symantec.com) has identified the “Dirtiest websites of Summer 2009,” a list of the 100 most threatening sites that try to deceive visitors, steal their information or crash their computer.

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Risky use of real data in application development

August 21, 2009 from: Office of Inadequate Security

Most organizations in the U.S. and U.K. put their sensitive customer and company data at risk during their application development and testing processes, according to a new study. 80% surveryed were hit by at least one breach in the past 12 months.

Comments  (0)


From the Web

Overcoming Objections to an Application Security Program

August 17, 2009 from: Jeremiah Grossman's Blog

Today a large percentage of security professionals truly “get” application security. They understand the importance, the best-practices, the value, etc. What inhibits their success the most in building an effective application security program is a lack of buy-in from the business and support from development groups.

Comments  (1)


From the Web

Security Religions and Risk Windows

August 09, 2009 from: Jeremiah Grossman's Blog

Information security threats are way up, fraud losses continue to rise, regulatory fines are increasingly common, and budget dollars to solve the myriad of problems are in short supply. Hampered by a sluggish economy, organizations simply cannot afford to hire all the talent they need, implement every best-practice, or buy every blinking light widget out there. Sacrifices are unavoidable, risk mus...

Comments  (0)


« First < Previous   | 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 |   Next > Last »