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Security Through Visibility - Montego, Lancope and NetFlow

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2008-07-30 21:57:06 by John Peterson in Security In The Virtual World
...concern. In fact, you can span a virtual switch's traffic out to a physical NIC as easy as you can to a virtual one. So why do it virtual and have to pay a 60% CPU utilization tax? Another solution is to IDS inspect only the things you care about. Why IDS inspect SSL traffic if you know your solution can't unencrypt SSL. Its just a waste of...
 
 
 
 
 
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Security Through Visibility - Montego, Lancope and NetFlow

The Article has images
2008-07-30 21:57:06 by John Peterson in Security In The Virtual World
...concern. In fact, you can span a virtual switch's traffic out to a physical NIC as easy as you can to a virtual one. So why do it virtual and have to pay a 60% CPU utilization tax? Another solution is to IDS inspect only the things you care about. Why IDS inspect SSL traffic if you know your solution can't unencrypt SSL. Its just a waste of...
 
 
 
 
 
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KimsCrafts e-commerce breach affects 4,500

The Article has images
2007-12-14 16:08:39 by Evan Francen in The Breach Blog
...concern with its e-commerce website recently reported to it This potential breach of security would have allowed access to consumer information from August 13, 2007 to October 1, 2007 that was limited to names, addresses and credit card numbers Evan] This breach included orders placed since June 25, 2001. This consists of more than six years...
 
 
 
 
 
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New Privacy Policy Wrinkles: Online Behavioral Advertising; and Potential new EU Data Protection Policy

2008-01-31 11:24:31 by Geoffrey Turner in Security & Risk Management
 
...concern that data collected for behavioral advertising may find its way into the hands of criminals or other wrongdoers, and concerns about the length of time companies are retaining consumer data, the FTC staff proposes Any company that collects or stores consumer data for behavioral advertising should provide reasonable security for that...
 
 
 
 
 
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More trustworthy election systems via SDL?

2008-02-04 23:34:00 by sdl in The Security Development Lifecycle
 
...concerns regarding voting machine (and their software) security. A recent New York Times article provides a good overview of voting machine security concerns; and academic studies on voting systems last year in California , Connecticut , Florida , and Ohio provide some interesting insights about security concerns and vulnerabilities in voting...
 
 
 
 
 
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Recent Symantec and IBM vulnerabilities, giblets, banned APIs and the SDL

2008-01-04 23:37:00 by sdl in The Security Development Lifecycle
 
...concern to me, because customers use security technology to defend themselves from attack Second, I like to analyze security vulnerabilities in other products to gauge where attackers are going. As the SDL hardens Microsoft products, we are seeing attackers move elsewhere Third, I like to think about how the SDL might have caught the bugs....
 
 
 
 
 
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Reliability Vs. Security

2007-12-07 16:46:00 by sdl in The Security Development Lifecycle
 
...concern, it might be the industry and academic experts that attend this prestigious IEEE conference I gave the industry keynote to open the second day of ISSRE 07 this past November, and started this debate by focusing on the topic that consumes my days: security. I painted a picture of the disaster scenarios we spend a heroic amount of...
 
 
 
 
 
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My Open Wireless Network

2008-01-15 03:33:22 by schneier in Schneier on Security
 
...concern me? Pay it forward, I say Certainly this does concern ISPs. Running an open wireless network will often violate your terms of service. But despite the occasional cease-and-desist letter and providers getting pissy at people who exceed some secret bandwidth limit, this isn't a big risk either. The worst that will happen to you is that...
 
 
 
 
 
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My Open Wireless Network

2008-01-15 03:33:22 by schneier in Schneier on Security
 
...concern me? Pay it forward, I say Certainly this does concern ISPs. Running an open wireless network will often violate your terms of service. But despite the occasional cease-and-desist letter and providers getting pissy at people who exceed some secret bandwidth limit, this isn't a big risk either. The worst that will happen to you is that...
 
 
 
 
 
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