Archive for January 2013
January 2, 2013
· Worth Reading: Smart, but insecure Samsung TVs
· Chrome Clickjacking Vulnerability Could Expose User Information on Google, Amazon
January 3, 2013
· Fraudulent Certificate for Google Domains Found After Mistake by Turkish CA
January 8, 2013
· Yahoo adds HTTPS support to Yahoo mail
· Facebook password reset bug closed
January 10, 2013
· European Cybercrime Centre opens for business
· Dangerous vulnerability in latest Java version
January 12, 2013
· Java plugins unplugged by Mozilla and Apple
· Moxie Marlinspike Leaving Twitter Security Team
January 14, 2013
· Alleged Zeus botnet master nabbed in Bangkok
· ICS-CERT reports virus infections at US power utilities
· Fix for critical Java hole released
January 15, 2013
· Calls for internet law reform and open access after activist suicide
· Operation Red October - large-scale cyber-espionage uncovered
January 16, 2013
· North Korea accused of hacking South Korean newspaper
· Michael Jackson recording hackers avoid jail time
January 17, 2013
· Attacking networks using electromagnetic interference
· Aaron's Law hopes to blunt US computer crime law
January 18, 2013
· The Shylock banking trojan now travels by Skype
· Silent installs of add-ons still possible in Firefox
January 19, 2013
· FAKEM RAT Mimics Normal Network Traffic
· Google Looking Into Hardware to Help Kill the Password
January 23, 2013
· Red October closes as Kaspersky publishes more details
· Plugin exploits can now win Pwn2Own prizes
January 24, 2013
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· ICS-CERT warns of SCADA password cracker
January 26, 2013
· Gozi trojan: Charges brought against three Europeans in the US
January 28, 2013
· Anonymous defaces US Sentencing Commission site
· Oracle plans to talk down Java security concerns
January 29, 2013
· Google offers exploit bounties for Pwn2Own and Pwnium
· 50 Million Potentially Vulnerable to UPnP Flaws
January 30, 2013
· Mozilla pulling plug on auto-running nearly all plugins
· Latest VLC version has dangerous hole
January 31, 2013
· 86,800 network printers open to the whole internet - is one of them yours?
· 190 million employment and salary records sold to debt collectors and financial service companies






