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Ben Rothke's News

Anytown, New York (United States)
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11.1.07
Ben Rothke (4,323 pts )
Managing Editor in Enterprise Security Channel

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  • November 04, 2008
  • SC World Congress New York City Dev. 2008

    From: http://www.scmagazineus.com/SC-World-Congress/section/381/

     

    • The SC World Congress, Dec. 9-10, 2008, at the Javits Convention Center in New York, is a must attend event for IT security professionals.

    • Free plenary sessions and highly targeted panels led by leaders in the IT security field offer exclusive information and practical learning experiences that provide real insights and answers that you can immediately put to work inside your business.

    • A high quality series of conference sessions, brought to you by some of the most influential and knowledgeable experts in the industry, will offer in-depth user experiences and thought leadership so you can stay several steps ahead of the emerging and unforeseen threats to your business.

    • In addition, a vibrant expo floor will showcase the latest innovations and solutions from leading vendors.

    • For 20 years, SC Magazine has consistently delivered the inside knowledge you need to help safeguard your company's critical assets. Now, the number one respected brand in objective security information is bringing to life all that you've come to trust from SC Magazine, and we are bringing the event to the U.S.'s largest captive audience of IT security customers: New York professionals.

    • Mark your calendar now for SC Magazine's biggest event of the year. Your time is incredibly valuable, so make the most of it this December 9-10 by attending the SC World Congress.

    The SC World Congress, presented by SC Magazine, is the conference and expo that information security professionals won't want to miss.

    Faced with the challenges of safeguarding their organizations' customer data and intellectual property, complying with a long list of regulatory demands, and staying abreast of new threats and even newer applications, these pros will find at the SC World Congress expert insight and advice they can use. Over two days of plenary sessions, targeted panels and an instructive expo floor, the SC World Congress features the actionable, inside information that IT security and corporate management needs to safeguard their company's critical assets from threats, such as malware, targeted attacks, careless -- or malicious -- employees, and even careless executives.

    At the SC World Congress, attendees from all the major verticals -- such as finance, health care, government, and more -- will gain insight from industry leaders and fellow security professionals as SC Magazine explores the need-to-know topics that help IT security professionals do their jobs better.

    Register Now

  • September 13, 2008
  • Hackers hit Large Hadron Collider Web site

     http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9114590&source=NLT_PM&nlid=8

     

    Hackers hit Large Hadron Collider Web site

    Greek group says it defaced site of one of the project's main experiments

    Gregg Keizer

    September 12, 2008 (Computerworld) Hackers defaced one of the Web sites of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) earlier this week, but the controversial science project's network suffered no permanent damage, a spokesman for CERN maintained today.

    The attack took place Monday, two days before the massive collider ran its first operational test, said James Gillies, a spokesman for the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN, which operates the LHC.

    A group going by the name Greek Security Team, or GST, claimed responsibility for the defacement of one of the LHC sites, cmsmon.cern.ch, according to a report earlier Friday in U.K. newspaper The Telegraph.

    Hackers ended the long message that temporarily replaced the CERN site with the line: "We are 2600 - dont [sic] mess with us," the newspaper said.

    It was a defacement, and that's all it was, said Gillies today. "It was benign, but it reminds us that we need to be vigilant," he said. "And no harm was done to the experiment or its computer network." No additional files, malicious or otherwise, had been injected into the project's computers, he said.

    CERN brought the site back up but has blocked public access. Instead, only CERN users can reach the revived site.

    The hackers targeted a site for the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS), one of the major experiments being run at the LHC. Built around a huge solenoid magnet that generates a magnetic field 100,000 times more powerful than Earth's own, the CMS detector is designed to search for the Higgs boson particle and others that could make up the elusive dark matter scientists theorize comprises the bulk of the universe's matter.

    The CMS detector is a rival of the ATLAS experiment, a second LHC sensor that uses radically different technologies and designs for its magnetic detector. CMS is located in France, while ATLAS is in Switzerland; the LHC sprawls across the Franco-Swiss border near Geneva.

    Prior to Wednesday's test, some people had claimed that switching on the LHC would create a black hole that would destroy the earth. CERN responded last week with a report that dismissed the fears as "unfounded." Scientists associated with the project have also received death threats.

    Site defacements are not unusual. Zone-H.org, a group that collects evidence of site attacks, logs hundreds each day. But attacks against internationally known domains are relatively rare. In June, for example, a Turkish hacker group broke into the site for the Phoenix Mars Lander, at the time a new NASA arrival on the Red Planet.

     

     

     

     

  • July 09, 2008
  • Ron Tovbin part of this channel
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