Tuesday, September 27, 2016

A quick fix for stupid password reset questions

Bossies 2016: The Best of Open Source Software Awards

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.

InfoWorld Security Report

Sep 27, 2016
Featured Image

A quick fix for stupid password reset questions

This ridiculous feature is a major vulnerability. If you're forced to use it, here's how to make it more secure Read More

Twitter Facebook LinkedIn

Your Must-Read Stories

Bossies 2016: The Best of Open Source Software Awards
Lockdown! Harden Windows 10 for maximum security
Caught between security and stupidity
Microsoft finally fixes double-print bug, but more patching problems loom
Yahoo's claim of 'state-sponsored' hackers meets with skepticism

White Paper: Trend Micro Incorporated

4 Countermeasures to Protect Against Ransomware

By now, not only security professionals, but also many knowledge workers and consumers are well aware of the insidious nature of ransomware. As its name implies, ransomware is malicious software that holds data files hostage pending the payment of a ransom, typically with untraceable bitcoin as the currency of choice. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Bossies 2016: The Best of Open Source Software Awards

InfoWorld editors and contributors pick the top open source software for datacenters, clouds, developers, big data analysts, and IT pros Read More

Thumbnail Image

Lockdown! Harden Windows 10 for maximum security

To make the most of Windows 10's security improvements, you must target the right edition and hardware for your needs Read More

Thumbnail Image

Caught between security and stupidity

A simple call to tech support first uncovers an alarming problem, then leads to another festering issue at a client company Read More

Thumbnail Image

Microsoft finally fixes double-print bug, but more patching problems loom

The convoluted method Microsoft used to fix the MS16-098 double-printing bug is a harbinger of screw-ups to come with the new all-or-nothing approach to patching Read More

Thumbnail Image

Yahoo's claim of 'state-sponsored' hackers meets with skepticism

The company isn't saying how it arrived at the conclusion that its massive data breach was carried out by a state-sponsored actor Read More

White Paper: Trend Micro Incorporated

Billion-Dollar Scams:The Numbers Behind Business Email Compromise

Over the past two years, Business Email Compromise (BEC) schemes have caused at least $3.1 billion in total losses to approximately 22,000 enterprises around the world, according to the latest figures from the FBI. Since January 2015, there has been a 1,300% increase in identified exposed losses, amounting to an average loss of 40,000 per scam. Read More

Get The Deep Technology Insights You Need

Get ongoing access to our exclusive Insider content — Deep Dive PDFs and in-depth articles — available to Insider members. You get access not only to InfoWorld's Insider content but to selected Insider content from Computerworld, CIO.com, Network World, CSO, and other IDG Enterprise publications. Sign up at no cost today!

Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Google+

You are currently subscribed to InfoWorld Security Report as jonsan98@gmail.com.

Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Subscribe | Privacy Policy

Learn more about INSIDER

Copyright (C) 2016 InfoWorld, 492 Old Connecticut Path, Framingham, MA 01701

Please do not reply to this message.
To contact someone directly, send an e-mail to online@infoworld.com.

ads

Ditulis Oleh : Angelisa Vivian Hari: 7:03 AM Kategori:

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 

Blog Archive