June, 2009:
- Mozilla Firefox 3.5 officially released
- Appellate court affirms that Zango can't sue Kaspersky
- "Iceman" hacker pleads guilty, faces 60 years
- China delays filtering order
- Trojans are fastest-growing data-stealing malware
- Britney Spears Twitpic account hacked; fake death posted
- FTC settles with "scareware" defendant for $1.9 million
- FTP login credentials at major corporations breached
- Q2 security highlights
- Michael Jackson's death exploited by cybercriminals
- Former U.S. cybersecurity chief appointed CEO of ICANN
- IBM develops a way to process encrypted data
- Laptops containing PII for 250,000 stolen from Canada hospital
- June 22, 2009: Twitter malware
- Facebook evolves options for its privacy settings
- Final settlement reached in CVS HIPAA violation suit
- Flash drive stolen from Florida Department of Revenue
- Security market revenue up
- Weak programs = 2.7 billion
- PCI DSS standards to face open comment
- Security can drive business, Microsoft survey finds
- Defense secretary creates cyberspace command
- Adobe updates Shockwave
- TJX settles over breach with 41 states for $9.75 million
- Google patches Chrome
- Dennis Brixius, VP, Risk Management and CSO, The McGraw-Hill Companies
- Jim Nelms, CISO, The World Bank, Treasury
- Guilty plea for Detroit "spam king"
- Sensitive computer stolen from Cornell University
- Survey: CISOs worried about insiders, data breaches
- Twitter malicious software attacks drag on
- Facebook bloggers reveal way to peek at private profiles
- Fake Microsoft "critical update" spam propagating trojan
- Data loss during downsizing: When employees exit, so does data
- W. Hord Tipton, executive director and member of the Board of Directors, (ISC)²
- Daniel Blum, senior vice president and principal analyst, Burton Group Security and Risk Management Strategies
- Mac trojan targets game sites to infect users
- PCI-DSS: Not on health care provider's radar
- June 15, 2009: Make hacking legal
- Mobile storage device stolen from Kirkwood Community College in Iowa
- It's official: Microsoft to offer free anti-malware service
- Black Hat topics include hacking parking meters, social networks
- Worm in Twitter invites
- Latest upgrade to iPhone includes 46 security fixes
- Security expert wants feds to recruit volunteer pen testers
- New security standards for mobile payments coming
- How to Reduce the Scope of PCI DSS Audits by Tokenizing Payment Card Data
- Criminal network to trade botnets and malware uncovered
- Tim Stanley, director of information security and CISO, Continental Airlines
- "Nine-Ball" mass injection attack compromised 40,000 sites
- Malicous attacks increase
- Google responds to call for more security
- UND donors’ financial info at risk
- Microsoft seeks $750,000 in lawsuit over click fraud
- Randolph Smith, manager, information security, UPS
- URL shortening site hacked to redirect millions of links
- Researcher plans to unveil a month of Twitter bugs in July
- Apple releases Java fixes
- Protecting assets in a mobile world
- Spam king Wallace could be jailed
- Iran election protesters use Twitter to recruit hackers
- Three charged with hijacking corporate phone systems
- FTC releases FAQs on Red Flags Rules
- June 8, 2009: A hacker goes to Washington
- Air France crash prompts spam, malware outbreak
- Illinois agency missing 52 computers
- Mozilla releases security fixes for Firefox
- Eliminate Admin Rights from all Laptop Users
- Symantec, McAfee settle with New York state
- Army ends ban on Facebook, Flickr, other social media sites
- Google updates Chrome security; withdraws crashing development browser
- Heartland, RBS WorldPay lawsuits consolidated
- Data loss is the top concern in the enterprise
- Apple references security in Snow Leopard announcement
- Choosing the right security information management solution
- A change in mindset has arrived
- Microsoft tool kills rogue AV
- Pricewert shutdown brought only short-lived drop in spam
- Safeguarding your mobile networks
- Adobe patches Reader and Acrobat for "critical" vulnerabilities
- Hot or not: Web application vulnerabilities hit inflection point
- Microsoft serves up 10 patches, including IIS and IE fixes
- New Safari 4.0 fixes more than 50 vulnerabilities
- T-Mobile confirms hack but doubts crooks have the goods
- Defendant pleads guilty in brokerage keylogger case
- Father's Day phishing plug
- Bank insider nabbed
- DHS appoints former hacker, Black Hat founder to council
- Hackers claim they raided sensitive T-Mobile information
- VCU computer stolen
- Sears, FTC settle spyware accusations
- Virginia notifies breach victims
- Chrome for Mac, Linux is out, but Google warns of its dangers
- June 1, 2009: Black-hat SEO
- Adobe fixes come Tuesday
- ISP Pricewert shuttered for distributing spam
- Is the CISO gaining influence?
- Threat of the month: PDF/Acrobat vulnerabilities
- Oracle's big purchase of Sun
- Get in line with EU rules
- The weakest link means risk
- Security pros must speak in one voice
- Letters
- A content tsunami is coming
- Health care security: Record setting
- Protecting privacy
- Mobile education: Niagara College Canada and Top Layer
- Selling your vision
- A night to remember
- Microsoft readies 10 patches for next week
- Cybercriminals targeting Twitter "trending topics"
- Survey finds hiring hurdles
- Amit Yoran, chairman and CEO, NetWitness
- Google rates Gumblar distribution URL as top malware site
- List of U.S. nuclear facilities inadvertently posted on website
- The many morphs of a phishing/malware scam
- DHS appoints new director of National Cybersecurity Center
- Software crack site hides malware repository
- Windows 7 ships Oct. 22
- Twitter hit with rogue anti-virus scams
- Bank of America certificate scam propagating Waledac, Virut
- Apple patches QuickTime for 10 security holes
- Hackers hit U.S. Army websites
- "Beladen" website compromises cropping up
- Email: An open door to sophisticated security threats