The United States Department of Justice yesterday announced the creation of a new cybercrime unit within its Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section.
Monthly Archives: December 2014
Christmas is coming… And cyber-criminals are on the prowl
Christmas is coming, and what could be better this year than doing your Christmas shopping without having to leave home. All you need is a computer, an Internet connection and your credit card. Yet although this is one of the great benefits of the Web, it can also be the perfect trap: It gives certain types of criminals the chance to steal from a store’s customers without even going near the stop.
Stores’ Web pages receive their customers’ account details in order to complete the online transaction. If a cyber-criminal manages to access the store’s system, they would have access to this information and could exploit it to carry out their own transactions. To prevent this, you should make sure that the website interacts with the platform that your bank has set up in order to purchase online securely.
While such systems are at risk throughout the year, the Christmas period sees a lot more of this type of crime, given the amount of transactions that take place.
However, even if you go physically to the point-of-sale, there are still risks. In 2013, Target, the US retail chain, fell victim to an attack that leaked the credit card details of 40 million customers.
During the store’s Christmas campaign, cyber-criminals used a type of malware that targeted point-of-sale (POS) terminals, infecting the credit card payment systems. Since then, there have been many more such attacks, and the tools used are continually updated.
The strain of malware that hit Target was BlackPOS, a program that exploits a vulnerability to install on computers connected to POS terminals. It identifies the card reader process and steals information from the terminal memory with another malware: RAM Scraper.
This year another malicious code, FrameworkPOS, is doing the rounds. So far it has been used in attacks aimed at The Home Depot. With this system, cyber-criminals have managed to obtain the credit and debit card details of more than 50 million customers.
According to the Department of Homeland Security, as many as a thousand companies around the United States have been affected by another malicious code, dubbed Backoff, which targets POS terminals. Its effects are similar: It extracts data from the terminals’ memories to obtain card passwords. It infiltrates systems through the file ‘explorer.exe’.
Although there is little that customers can do about the malware that affects POS terminals, companies can take preventive measures. They should make sure that their antivirus solutions are up-to-date, use complex passwords on all devices, check their firewall and use encrypted data transfer systems.
The post Christmas is coming… And cyber-criminals are on the prowl appeared first on MediaCenter Panda Security.
CVE-2014-5462 – Multiple Authenticated SQL Injections In OpenEMR
Posted by Portcullis Advisories on Dec 05
Vulnerability title: Multiple Authenticated SQL Injections In OpenEMR
CVE: CVE-2014-5462
Vendor: OpenEMR
Product: OpenEMR
Affected version: 4.1.2(7) and earlier
Fixed version: N/A
Reported by: Jerzy Kramarz
Details:
SQL injection has been found and confirmed within the software as an authenticated user. A successful attack could
allow an authenticated attacker to access information such as usernames and password hashes that are stored in the…
How to delete yourself from Google Search
Deleting yourself from Google is not quite as simple as pressing a button, but you can manage your digital footprint by following these 5 simple steps.
The post How to delete yourself from Google Search appeared first on We Live Security.
Bugtraq: [SECURITY] [DSA 3088-1] qemu-kvm security update
[SECURITY] [DSA 3088-1] qemu-kvm security update
Bugtraq: [oCERT-2014-009] JasPer input sanitization errors
[oCERT-2014-009] JasPer input sanitization errors
Bugtraq: [SECURITY] [DSA 3089-1] jasper security update
[SECURITY] [DSA 3089-1] jasper security update
Bugtraq: [SECURITY] [DSA 3090-1] iceweasel security update
[SECURITY] [DSA 3090-1] iceweasel security update
NEW: VMSA-2014-0012 – VMware vSphere product updates address security vulnerabilities
Posted by VMware Security Response Center on Dec 05
————————————————————————
VMware Security Advisory
Advisory ID: VMSA-2014-0012
Synopsis: VMware vSphere product updates address security
vulnerabilities
Issue date: 2014-12-04
Updated on: 2014-12-04 (Initial Advisory)
CVE number: CVE-2014-3797, CVE-2014-8371, CVE-2013-2877, CVE-2014-0191,
CVE-2014-0015, CVE-2014-0138, CVE-2013-1752 and…
RHSA-2014:1959-1: Moderate: kernel security and bug fix update
Red Hat Enterprise Linux: Updated kernel packages that fix one security issue and three bugs are now
available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.
Red Hat Product Security has rated this update as having Moderate security
impact. A Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) base score, which
gives a detailed severity rating, is available from the CVE link in the
References section.
CVE-2014-0181