A call for critical thinking about securing our electric grid

The nation’s electric power grid is a vital part of our critical infrastructure, but it might not be as vulnerable and fragile as it appears. One expert says it is more resilient than we give it credit for.

Microsoft issues alert on Windows kernel bug

Microsoft issued a new security advisory involving an obscure Windows kernel bug — an elevation of privilege exploit has been present in all 32-bit Windows versions since Windows NT.

New evidence in Google attack points East

A security researcher for SecureWorks says he has found evidence to support Google's claim that last month's attacks on the company’s systems originated in China, while another security expert called the attacks the largest and most sophisticated in years aimed at businesses.

Google’s broken China

Google sticks to its guns in opposing human rights violations by Chinese government and reconsidering its operations in China.

Microsoft advises upgrading IE 6 to avoid zero-day bug

Microsoft provided more advice about a zero-day Internet Explorer vulnerability recently exploited by hackers. The bug enabled attacks on Google and other companies, Microsoft has confirmed, but IE 6 appears to be the only browser version affected, the company announced this week.

Governments weigh the pros and cons of private clouds

Cloud computing is a tough sell to governments because of privacy and security concerns. Private clouds could make the difference.

Hackers attack Google using Microsoft security hole

Microsoft's security team confirmed that the hackers had used the first zero-day flaw found in Internet Explorer to try to steal information from Google and other companies.

Army mulls realignment to fortify cyber command

Army officials are weighing realigning networking and communications units to build a fully operational cyber component by October 2010.

Adobe issues security fixes for Reader and Acrobat

By convincing a user to open a malicious PDF file, an attacker could execute code or cause a vulnerable PDF viewer to crash.

10 technologies to watch in 2010

Government policies on information sharing, mobility, more efficient networking and, of course, security help define the technologies that will be hot this year.

RedSeal Network Advisor can keep security devices in compliance

RedSeal's Network Advisor can get a network's security devices under one compliance umbrella.

Secure AppGuard can help defend against unknown threats

AppGuard can provide a safety net for traditional antivirus software, stopping even the latest threats that normal protection misses.

False sense of cybersecurity

Paul Bell, president of Dell's Public Sector business writes: Newly appointed National Cybersecurity Coordinator Howard Schmidt has a big job ahead of him. Getting individuals, businesses and government to take greater responsibility is one of three places he should start.

Adobe: Eclipsing Microsoft as patch concern?

Microsoft's January security patch contained just one Windows fix, but IT pros likely will have to spend some time plugging holes in Adobe products too this month.

South Korean military bans USB flash drives

In the wake of recent hacking attempts, the South Korean military plans to ban portable flash drives, according to reports.

FIPS-certified USB drives have security flaws

Vulnerabilities in supposedly secure USB flash drives that received FIPS certification are causing NIST to review the certification process for cryptographic modules.

Air Force deploys wireless LANs for personnel access to classified, unclassified networks

Systems integrator Telos developed a secure network using Aruba's mesh network and encryption technologies from Harris Corp. and L-3 Communications.

Single Windows fix in Microsoft's January patch cycle

This sole critical patch is a Windows-level fix and will affect every supported operating system -- even Windows 7. The vulnerability to be patched has remote code execution security implications.

Some Kingston key drives aren't so secure after all

Kingston isn’t saying how its drives can be hacked, but from what we found experimenting with ours, we can make an intelligent guess.

Microsoft: IIS 6.0 has 'inconsistencies,' but no bug

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