Cybersecurity buzz could be a bubble
The cybersecurity market is booming, but how long will that continue?
Has Conficker spurred a new model for security response?
The Conficker Working Group is a rare example of cooperation between multiple aspects of the private and public sectors to combat a cybersecurity threat, and it could represent a model for future response.
Two critical Windows fixes coming Tuesday
Microsoft expects to deliver just two critical fixes in its May security update, arriving this Tuesday.
NIST guide: The imperative of real-time risk management
NIST is revising its guidance for assessing the IT security controls required under FISMA as part of an effort to emphasize real-time risk management and to harmonize security requirements across government.
Terrorism goes low-tech
Don’t discount terrorists’ low-tech devices — they’re dangerous, too.
Treasury shuts down 4 cloud-hosted Web sites after infection
Malicious code, which apparently came from servers in Ukraine, discovered in four Treasury Web sites hosted by a cloud service provider causes Treasury to shut down infected sites.
10 years later, the LoveBug still resonates
The LoveBug, or the ILOVEYOU worm, which appeared in the Philippines on May 5, 2000, and quickly spread to Asia, Europe and the United States, marks its 10th anniversary. It's still considered one of the worst worms of the computer age.
Federal mortgage watchdog agency struggles with its information security
The Federal Housing Finance Agency, created in 2008, has not fully implemented an information security program and has weaknesses in its logical and physical access controls, according to a GAO study.
Cyber criminals get sloppy in recent attacks
Cyber crime and espionage are growing problems, but we can take some heart in the fact that the bad guys are not supervillains, says columnist William Jackson.
NIST will coordinate national cybersecurity education program
The National Institute of Standards and Technology will work with agencies on a new program to improve cybersecurity education.
Rockefeller calls for public-private action on cybersecurity
Sen. Jay Rockefeller's cybersecurity bill would promote shared responsibility between government and industry.
Battling cyber threats requires a global security framework, experts say
At its forum in Washington, the Business Software Alliance released its Global Cybersecurity Framework, a 12-point plan toward building a global policy approach to cybersecurity.
Encryption may end flash drives' exile for good
In late 2008, the Strategic Command's Joint Task Force-Global Network Operations put in place an immediate ban on the use of flash drives -- USB storage devices that have become the modern version of the floppy disk.
FISMA gets the tools to do the job
Use of automated monitoring and report tools will help to align FISMA compliance with best security practices that have evolved over the last eight years.
The top threats to government systems, and where they're coming from
Symantec’s Government Internet Threat Security Report describes a threat landscape dominated by Web-based attacks and targeted persistent threats in which it is difficult to identify the attacker.
FCC seeks information on survivability and security of nation’s broadband nets
The FCC takes the first steps toward a proposed voluntary security certification program for service providers and a study of the survivability of the nation’s broadband infrastructure, both part of the National Broadband Plan.
Giving hackers a dose of their own poison
Agencies have some options to strike back at hackers using the hackers' own tools. A security expert explains how.
Can agency systems handle new FISMA requirements?
New standards for reporting under the Federal Information Security Management Act are intended to further reduce paper, but not all agencies are well equipped to meet them.
Google attacks began with an employee’s click, reports say
The attacks gained access to Google’s password system, which handles single sign-on access for millions of users, according to reports in the New York Times and Washington Post.
Windows kernel patch sidesteps rootkit infections
Microsoft's April patch will block installing a Windows kernel fix in the presence of troublesome malware.
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