Pick Category

 

Things I read today that I found interesting and worthy of comment December 21st:

 

Things I read today that I found interesting and worthy of comment December 17th:

  • Australia Restores Some Sanity to Airport Screening – Particularly funny given that the morons at Atlanta Hartsfield have determined that folks with boarding passes that read "Bob" or "Rob" while their driver licenses or passports read "Robert" will be disallowed through security! Remember that government, union employee means you have to square the total uselessness and moronicism (yeah, probably just made that up) of that erstwhile "person".
  • Browser Add-On Lets You Give Back While Shopping Online – Wanna "give back"? Succeed fully. Take care of all your family first. Enough socialist, feel-good-and-completely-useless nonsense. Might as well give your money to the fraudulent Al Gore or his "sky is falling" lie-umvirate!
  • YouTube: Why Do We Watch? – Cuz you're losers! People really troll YouTube? Get a freakin' life! Need to be concerned when a seriously heavy online user (me) tells you to get a life.
 

Strong Authentication Not Strong Enough — InformationWeek.


Two-factor authentication — used to protect online bank accounts with both a password and a computer-generated one-time passcode — is supposed to be more secure than relying on a single password.But Gartner Research VP Avivah Litan warns that cyber criminals have had success defeating two-factor authentication systems in Web browsing sessions using Trojan-based man-in-the-middle attacks.

A Gartner Research note written by Litan explains that in the past few months, Gartner has heard from many banks around the world that rely on one-time-password authentication systems. Accounts at these banks have been compromised by man-in-the-middle attacks — the report uses the term “man-in-the-browser” — despite the use of two-factor security.One technique that the fraudsters have been using to bypass security controls is call forwarding.

“[B]anks that rely on voice telephony for user transaction verification have seen those systems and processes compromised by thieves who persuade telecom carriers to forward legitimate user phone calls to the thief’s cell phone,” the report says. “These targeted attacks have resulted in theft of money and/or information, if the bank has no other defenses sufficient to prevent unauthorized access to their applications and customer accounts.”

A man-in-the-middle attack involves using software or hardware to intercept network traffic then send it to its destination so that the information can be used without the knowledge of the sender or the intended recipient.

In an e-mail, Litan said that the attacks have involved the Zeus Trojan and other customized malware.

The malware sometimes uses anti-forensic capabilities that re-write account balances in the user’s browser, so that the user believes his or her bank account has the funds it should, even through it is empty.

The Gartner report recommends addition defenses to monitor user behavior and/or transaction values, as well as out-of-band transaction verification.

According to the Internet Crime Complaint Center, which issued a warning about attacks on commercial bank accounts in November, total losses as of October amounted to about $100 million so far this year.

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