Posts Tagged: ‘trojan’

Some interesting news came from Google last night, and many news sites have already touched on it. Here’s the story in a nutshell: the company’s servers came under attack in China. Whoever instigated the attack was after information, and reports yesterday said that the accounts of dissidents were targeted. We know from Google’s blog post written by company Senior Vice President, Corporate Development and Chief Legal Officer David Drummond that the attack was successful and the hackers accessed intellectual property.

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Mobile devices aren’t usually the first targets you might think of when it comes to viruses, worms and Trojans. In fact, you could probably be forgiven for not knowing they exist at all. But I think that the recent popularity of smart phones with the consumer market may bring with it an interest in programming malware for those devices, as well.

And for a hacker who wants to make his or her mark on the consumer smart phone world, what better place to start than with the little machine that helped start the whole craze? Though certainly not the first smart phone, Apple’s iPhone was arguably the first smart phone that people found a reason to embrace for their personal use. And it’s sold millions for Apple.

Chet Wisniewski of security provider Sophos posted Saturday about a new worm that affects the iPhone. An Internet service provider in the Netherlands identified the malware.

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So the Black Hat security conference just wrapped up, and there are still lots of security news stories floating around, like this one from CNET posted this past Saturday. Elinor Mills wrote about two Israeli researchers, Itzik Kotler and Tomer Bitton, who have figured out a method by which your computer can become infected with malware by attempting to install software updates. In fact, their company, Radware, is going to be releasing a software tool that will help people see a 3-D view of other computers on a Wi-Fi network and help trick them into downloading dangerous programs instead.

The program is called Ippon, Mills said, and attackers can use it to see all the computers on the wireless network that are trying to find updates using the hypertext transfer protocol (that’s the HTTP at the beginning of Web addresses — Web pages use this method).

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Computer viruses have evolved just as quickly as computers themselves. Listen in as our HowStuffWorks staff breaks down history’s worst computer viruses.

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