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 Monday, July 07, 2008

Hackers have turned the harvesting of personal information from Monster.com and other large US jobsites into a lucrative black market business

A Russian gang called Phreak has created an online tool that extracts personal details from CVs posted onto sites including Monster.com, AOL Jobs, Ajcjobs.com, Careerbuilder.com, Careermag.com, Computerjobs.com, Hotjobs.com, Jobcontrolcenter.com, Jobvertise.com and Militaryhire.com. As a result the personal information (names, email addresses, home addresses and current employers) on hundreds of thousands of jobseakers has been placed at risk, according to net security firm PrevX.

Phreak has begun selling its "identity harvesting services" to fraudsters, charging $600 for data that might be applied to targeted phishing attacks, ID fraud or other nefarious purposes. Would-be clients are able to contact the gang on ICQ. For a fee the gang will filter its database for entries that refer to a particular country or particular employer.

Jacques Erasmus, director of research at PrevX, explained that he came across adverts for the tool in an underground forum. The PHP-based utility uses built-in recruiter IDs to trawl jobsites and return results in a handy web form, he explained.

"This is way beyond email harvesting tools. The utility is quite sophisticated and attempts to make sense of the data format found in CVs, extracting only useful information," Erasmus told The Register. "Phreak is selling its services to people running higher-end [targeted] spear phishing attacks."

Jobsites have been a target for data sniffing attack for some time. PrevX said the latest attack is distinct from one carried out by a Trojan horse program last year.

This time around the attack affects far more sites than Monster.com alone. Also the attack involves a harvesting engine, rather than the use of malware.

Job sites might be able to guard against the latest assault on user data by limiting the number of searches a "recruiter" can carry out or by applying CAPTCHAs, Erasmus explained.

A CAPTCHA is a type of challenge-response test designed to distinguish between requests from an automated program and a human. The approach typically asks a user to identify the letter in an image before allowing a request, such as an attempt to sign up to a web-mail service.

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Monday, July 07, 2008 4:16:46 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Monday, June 30, 2008

A group of software and online payment companies are teaming up to find a better way than passwords to protect, and prove, your identity online.

Problems with passwords are well known - people require ever more passwords which means they either get forgotten, or people use the same word for several different services which is a security risk. The new group will seek to find open standards to make it easier to prove your identity online without using dozens of passwords and usernames.

Equifax, Google, Microsoft, Novell, Oracle and PayPal will work together to create "Information Cards" - online cards like those in your wallet. Different cards can contain different levels of information and can be used to log in to different websites instead of using a username and password. Some may contain just a user name and password, others address information.

Other information - such as whether or not the browser is over 21 years old - could also be verified by the website by sending a query to the independent third party. In theory this should be safer - your information will not have to be stored by several different websites.

The group hopes to extend its reach beyond consumers to identifying users of enterprise networks too.

The Information Card Foundation has applied be a working group of Identity Commons which is also trying to create an open, independent identity layer for the internet.

The difficulty for such groups is convincing the market that it is truly independent, and not just promoting the agenda of its most powerful members.


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Monday, June 30, 2008 2:09:22 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Friday, February 29, 2008

There is no reliable way for consumers, regulators, and businesses to assess the relative incidence of identity fraud at major financial institutions. This lack of information prevents more vigorous competition among institutions to protect accountholders from identity theft. As part of a multiple strategy approach to obtaining more actionable data on identity theft, the Freedom of Information Act was used to obtain complaint data submitted by victims in 2006 to the Federal Trade Commission.

This complaint data identifies the institution where impostors established fraudulent accounts or affected existing accounts in the name of the victim. The data show that some institutions have a far greater incidence of identity theft than others. The data further show that the major telecommunications companies had numerous identity theft events, but a metric is lacking to compare this industry with the financial institutions. This is a first attempt to meaningfully compare institutions on their performance in avoiding identity theft.

This analysis faces several challenges that are described in the methods section.

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Friday, February 29, 2008 11:34:38 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Sunday, February 17, 2008

Former US DARPA Director Stephen Lukasik, Dr. Sy Goodman , Professor of International Affairs and Computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Dr. Anthony Rutkoswki, VeriSign, VP for Regulatory Affairs and Standards undertook multiple briefings to US Congress staff and congressmen dealing with the subjects of cybersecurity and infrastructure protection - under the auspices of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).

Dr. Lukasik is especially noted for his authorization and support for Internet development in the 1970s, establishing US domestic policies as the FCC's Chief Scientist, and as leader of efforts in the 1990s to bring about cybersecurity capabilities.

In addition to his multiple Georgia Tech security roles, Dr. Goodman spoke as Chair of the National Academy of Science Committee on Improving Cybersecurity Research in the U.S.

Dr. Rutkoswki treated important new developments occurring in the ITU-T concerning the subject of service provider identity and known as Trusted SPID. Trusted SPID - which emerged as a roadmap from the Seoul ITU-T meetings - may well be the most significant and essential cybersecurity development in a decade. The value proposition is simple and long a part of the ITU's role - institute trust in the network infrastructure and services by providing a global means of knowing basic identity information about the providers who comprise those infrastructures and services.

Dr. Goodman and Dr. Rutkoswki are members of the High-Level Experts Group for the Global Cybersecurity Agenda.

Related Links:

Dr. Seymour Goodman’s Presentation

Dr. Anthony Rutkoswki's Presentation

Dr. Stephen Lukasik's Presentation 

More information about the ITU Global Cybersecurity Agenda can be found here or by contacting Ms. Cristina Bueti at gca@itu.int

 

Sunday, February 17, 2008 2:52:48 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Tuesday, February 12, 2008

A new site lets users create profiles for the different sides of their personality.

Online social networks have allowed people to easily stay in touch with large groups of friends, but the flip side has been well publicized. Some users have struggled over what to do when certain people--such as a boss or an ex-boyfriend--ask to be listed as a friend on their profile.

Adding someone as a friend gives him access to the user's profile, photos, and daily musings. Worries about privacy were renewed recently when Facebook's Beacon advertising initiative began broadcasting information about users' purchasing habits throughout its networks. Now Moli, a recently launched social-networking site, aims to win over concerned users.

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Tuesday, February 12, 2008 10:13:04 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Sunday, January 27, 2008

During December, 2007, twelve cyber security SANS Institute veterans, with significant knowledge about emerging attack patterns, worked together to compile a list of the attacks most likely to cause substantial damage during 2008.

Here is their consensus list, in ranked order:

1. Increasingly sophisticated website attacks that exploit browser vulnerabilities - especially on trusted web sites. Website attacks on browsers are increasingly targeting components, such as Flash and QuickTime, that are not automatically patched when the browser is patched. At the same time, website attacks have migrated from simple ones based on one or two exploits posted on a website, to more sophisticated attacks based on scripts that cycle through multiple exploits, to even more sophisticated attacks that increasingly utilize packaged modules that can effectively disguise their payloads. One of the latest such modules, mpack, produces a claimed 10-25 percent success rate in exploiting browsers that visit sites infected with the module. While all this is happening, attackers are actively placing exploit code on popular, trusted Web sites where users have an expectation of effective security. Placing better attack tools on trusted sites is giving attackers a huge advantage over the unwary public.

2. Increasing sophistication and effectiveness in botnets The so-called Storm worm (which was not really a worm at all) started spreading in January, 2007, with an e-mail saying, ‘230 dead as storm batters Europe,’ and was followed by subsequent variants. Within a week, it accounted for one out of every twelve infections on the Internet, installing rootkits and making each infected system a member of a new type of botnet. Previous botnets used centralized command and control; the Storm worm uses peer-to-peer control, so there is no central controller to take down. Additional variants have used messages with different subjects and improved the capabilities of the rootkit. In 2008, additional variants and continually increasing sophistication will keep this worm and other even more sophisticated worms near the top of any list of menaces.

3. Cyber espionage efforts by well resourced organizations looking to extract large amounts of data - particularly using targeted phishing One of the biggest security stories of 2007 was disclosure in Congressional hearings and by senior DoD officials of massive penetration of federal agencies and defense contractors and theft of terabytes of data by various nation states. In 2008, despite intense scrutiny, these nation-state attacks will expand; more targets and increased sophistication will mean many successes for attackers. Economic espionage will be increasingly common as nation-states use cyber theft of data to gain economic advantage in multinational deals. The attack of choice involves targeted spear phishing with attachments, using well-researched social engineering methods to make the victim believe that an attachment comes from a trusted source, and using newly discovered Microsoft Office vulnerabilities and hiding techniques to circumvent virus checking.

4. Mobile phone threats, especially against iPhones and android-based phones; plus VoIP Mobile phones are general purpose computers, so worms, viruses, and other malware will increasingly target them. Google's recent announcement of ‘android’ and the formation of the ‘open handset alliance’ is a watershed moment for the mobile industry. A truly open mobile platform will usher in completely unforeseen security nightmares. The developer toolkits provide easy access for hackers. And, hackers are taking note. The author of Metasploit, H.D. Moore, plans a mobile payload presentation Webcast this month. Attacks on VoIP systems are on the horizon and may surge in 2008. VoIP phones and the IP PBXs have had numerous published vulnerabilities. Attack tools exploiting these vulnerabilities have been written and are available on the Internet. In short, the VoIP attack surface is enormous.

5. Insider attacks. Insider attacks are initiated by rogue employees, consultants, and/or contractors of an organization. Insider-related risk has long been exacerbated by the fact that insiders usually have been granted some degree of physical and logical access to systems, databases, and networks that they attack, giving them a significant head start in attacks that they launch. More recently, however, security perimeters have broken down, something that allows insiders to attack both from the inside and from outside an organization’s network boundaries. Insider-related risk (as well as outsider risk) has thus skyrocketed. Organizations need to put into place substantial defenses against this kind of risk, one of the most basic of which is limiting access according to what users need to do their jobs.

6. Advanced identity theft from persistent bots A new generation of identity theft is being powered by bots that stay on machines for three to five months collecting passwords, bank account information, surfing history, frequently used e-mail addresses, and more. They'll gather enough data to enable extortion attempts (against people who surf child porn sites, for example) and advanced identify theft attempts where criminals have enough data to pass basic security checks.

7. Increasingly malicious spyware Criminal and nation-state attackers continue to refine the capabilities of their malicious code, expanding on flux techniques to obscure their infrastructure, making it even harder to locate their servers. Additionally, the recent Storm variants’ capabilities of being able to detect investigators’ activity and then respond with a flooding attack against the investigators will become more mainstream and even more powerful, protecting the attackers and making investigation more difficult. Tools will also increasingly target and dodge anti-virus, anti-spyware, and anti-rootkit tools to help preserve the attacker's control of a victim machine for as long as possible. In short, malware will become stickier on target machines and more difficult to shut down.

8. Web application security exploits Large percentages of websites have cross site scripting, SQL injection, and other vulnerabilities resulting from programming errors. Until 2007, few criminals attacked these vulnerable sites because other attack vectors were more likely to lead to an advantage in unauthorized economic or information access. Increasingly, however, advances in XSS and other attacks have demonstrated that criminals looking for financial gain can exploit vulnerabilities resulting from web programming errors as new ways of penetrating important organizations. Web 2.0 applications are vulnerable because user-supplied data cannot be trusted; your script running in the users' browser still constitutes ‘user supplied data.’ In 2008, Web 2.0 vulnerabilities will be added to more traditional programming flaws and Web application attacks will grow substantially.

9. Increasingly sophisticated social engineering including blending phishing with VoIP and event phishing Blended approaches will amplify the impact of many more common attacks. For example, the success of phishing is being radically increased by first stealing IDs of users of other technologies. Salesforce.com users were targeted for a ‘FTC complaint’ phishing e-mail. Monster.com users were targeted for a job offer phishing e-mail. Even if it is non-targeted, event phishing is gaining in sophistication. Tax filing scams and scams based on the US Presidential elections will be widely used this year, and many of them will succeed. A note with the subject ‘Hillary drops out of the race’ or ‘Rudy and female staffer caught on film’ could generate huge new botnets of people who are interested in politics, but may not have patched their systems fully. Add to those opportunities potential bogus fund raising sites and even political dirty tricks going digital, and you'll have an explosive junction of hacking and politics. A second area of blended phishing combines e-mail and VoIP. An inbound e-mail, apparently being sent by a credit card company, asks recipients to ‘re-authorize’ their credit cards by calling a 1-800 number. The number leads them (via VoIP) to an automated system in a foreign country that, quite convincingly, asks that they key in their credit card number, CVV, and expiration date.

10. Supply chain attacks infecting consumer devices (USB thumb drives, GPS systems, Photo Frames, etc.) distributed by trusted organizations Retail outlets are increasingly becoming unwitting distributors of malware. Devices with USB connections and the CDs packaged with those devices sometimes contain malware that infect victims’ computers and connect them into botnets. Even more targeted attacks using the same technique are starting to hit conference attendees who are given USB thumb drives and CDs that supposedly contain just the conference papers, but increasingly also contain malicious software.

More information can be found here.

Sunday, January 27, 2008 10:14:13 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Wednesday, December 19, 2007

In yet another attempt at fighting the war on spyware, adware and viruses, the Cyber Security Enhancement Act was introduced to Congress on May 14th. This new act is a major step forward in the battle against botnet attacks.Botnets are groups of computers that hackers have gained access to illegally.

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Wednesday, December 19, 2007 12:12:10 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 

Security experts have warned of a sharp hike in malicious activity coming out of China. Finjan has examined the new wave of Chinese attacks and the mechanisms used, and claims to have identified an "intricate network of connections" between China-based servers run by cyber-criminals.

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Wednesday, December 19, 2007 12:09:53 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Thursday, November 29, 2007

The Federal Trade Commission today released a survey showing that 8.3 million American adults, or 3.7 percent of all American adults, were victims of identity theft in 2005. Of the victims, 3.2 million, or 1.4 percent of all adults, experienced misuse of their existing credit card accounts; 3.3 million, or 1.5 percent, experienced misuse of non-credit card accounts; and 1.8 million victims, or 0.8 percent, found that new accounts were opened or other frauds were committed using their personal identifying information.

More information can be found here.

Thursday, November 29, 2007 7:35:27 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 

Cyber criminals and cyber spies have shifted their focus again, successfully evading the countermeasures that most companies and government agencies have worked for years to put into place.

Facing real improvements in system and network security, the attackers now have two new prime targets that allow them to evade firewalls, antivirus and even intrusion prevention tools: users who are easily misled and custom-built applications. This is a major shift from prior years when attackers limited most of their targets to flaws in commonly used software.

More information can be found here.

Additional information can be found here.

Thursday, November 29, 2007 7:23:59 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 

Millions of young people have made themselves vulnerable to identity theft as well as putting their future academic and professional prospects at risk by recklessly posting personal information on the internet, Britain's privacy watchdog warns in a report published on 23 November 2007.

More information can be found here.

Thursday, November 29, 2007 4:23:51 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Wednesday, November 21, 2007

The House of Lords Science and Technology Committee have highlighted the threat to the future of the Internet posed by e-crime, and have argued that the Government must do more to protect individual Internet users.

The full report can be viewed here

Wednesday, November 21, 2007 5:01:55 PM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Monday, November 19, 2007

The U.S. Senate has passed a bill that would allow victims of online identity theft schemes to seek restitution from criminals and expands the definition of cyberextortion.

The Senate passed the Identity Theft Enforcement and Restitution Act by unanimous consent last week. The bill, introduced a month ago by Senator Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat, allows victims of identity theft to seek restitution for the time they spend to fix the problems. The bill would allow prosecutors to go after criminals who threaten to take or release information from computers with cyberextortion, and it would allow prosecutors to charge cybercriminals with conspiracy to commit a cybercrime.

More information can be found here.

Monday, November 19, 2007 11:12:22 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Cyber-Crime has outstripped illegal drug sales worldwide, and analysts estimate online fraud will bring in $105 billion in 2007. Despite the fact that most people know going online poses a risk for becoming a victim of crime, few individuals, companies or even government agencies truly understand the massive scope of the problem. Favorite ways of defrauding 'Net users include "phishing," or using trickery to get a person to reveal their personal data, stealing bank account numbers, appropriating credit cards, and many other means.

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Wednesday, October 17, 2007 11:09:00 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Tuesday, September 04, 2007
The RSA Anti-Fraud Command Center (AFCC) of the RSA, the security division of EMC, reported a number of phishing attacks in July, with banks in Saudi Arabia and Dubai, as well as a major financial services provider being targeted. The vendor will be promoting the benefits of an information centric approach to security during GITEX.

RSA's information-centric approach addresses moves away from simply protecting the network perimeter and instead looks to protect critical data wherever it resides. Identity management to authenticate users and determine which data they can access is another element of the approach, as is the need to manage any data which is required for regulatory compliance and to manage the security policy.

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Tuesday, September 04, 2007 8:54:26 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Thursday, August 30, 2007
With the release of Norton Internet Security 2008 and Norton Antivirus 2008, Symantec is highlighting the behavioral-detection capabalities of both software packages to detect and block zero-day malware. Both Norton Internet Security and Norton Antivirus offer this zero-day malware protection in a software module called Sonar.

The growing problem of identity theft is a key focus of the 2008 versions of Symantec's Norton Internet Security and Antivirus programs, released on Tuesday. The Cupertino, California-based company said that the packages, designed for Windows XP and Windows Vista, feature enhanced protection against identity theft and other online security threats.

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Thursday, August 30, 2007 10:03:45 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     | 
 Thursday, August 23, 2007

Online security is one of the key requirements by financial customers today as they increasingly use the Internet to not only manage their financial transactions online but also to buy financial products. According to a consumer attitude study by Jupiter Research, banks that invest in and promote the security of their online websites stand to differentiate themselves from their competitors and win customers. This combined with the rapid growth in online phishing and identity scams and increasing regulatory pressure has ensured that online security is a critical concern among banks today.

Just like how there are global standards such as SWIFT, J2EE etc, there should be a central standard body that prescribes guidelines for banks to adopt with respect to security and also encourage banks to adopt these standards.

More at IndianTimes

Thursday, August 23, 2007 11:04:38 AM (W. Europe Standard Time, UTC+01:00)  #     |