There is a never ending stream of vulnerabilities in the mechanical and cyber systems that support the grid. So, why hasn’t there been any significant breach of the grid?
Author: ISBuzz Team
London, UK (7 October 2013) – According to DOSarrest Internet Security, findings by its Vulnerability Testing and Optimisation service (VTO) of deep website scans, ninety percent of websites are vulnerable to attack.
Business is increasingly taking place outside the corporate firewall. Employees are using their own devices and turning to consumer-grade cloud file sharing services to allow for access across multiple devices
Several statistics gathering engines on the web reveal an interesting picture. Content management systems (CMS) have become far more popular in the last couple of years.
In an important customer announcement published yesterday, Adobe notified customers that its network had been breached, and the attackers illegally accessed information relating to 2.9 million Adobe customers
A highly resilient botnet conservatively estimated to generate about $700,000 per year in fraudulent advertising revenue narrowly escaped a shutdown engineered by whitehats from security firm Symantec.
FireEye’s World War C report showed that only 0.016% of cyber attacks originate from the UK.
Ads are coming to Instagram in the next couple of months, the photo- and video-sharing app maker said Thursday.
Twitter has fewer users and less revenue than Facebook, but in mobile advertising Twitter appears to have dodged the problems that dragged down Facebook’s stock after its public offering last year.
(INFOGRAPHIC) Web applications are inherently insecure due to vulnerabilities that are hard to patch and easy to exploit.