May, 2014:
- 160,000 new malware samples arriving every day
- Hunting Attackers with Network Audit Trails
- PCI DSS audit tool cracked by cybercriminals
- Bogus Heartbleed cure is malware
- Retailer Office data breach demonstrates tenuous security
- Sophisticated Iranian cyber-espionage campaign revealed
- Hackers winning says US Secret Service
- Chained to a computer, but trying to be useful - Q and A with Eddie Copeland
- PayPal phishing up 73% in Q1
- Repeat attacks hit two thirds of DDoS victims
- Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg called to court in Iran
- Superman and General Zod - Q and A with Stewart Room
- Facebook and Yahoo users hit by 'polite' IM Trojan
- China claims tech companies aid US surveillance
- Hacker Sabu sentenced, set free after cooperation
- Security Baubles
- Aussie Apple users hacked and ransomed
- AV vendor Avast takes forum offline after hack
- ICO criticises Student Loans Company for data breaches
- Cookies flaw lets hackers steal WordPress accounts
- XP users urged to hack for security
- If MDM is failing, what's the solution?
- SNMP networks vulnerable to DDoS attacks, warns Akamai
- Chinese state hackers revealed - victims fail to report breaches
- ICYMI: eBay passwords, bad guys get badder & Microsoft's mad week
- eBay breach data for sale, believed a fraud
- Operation Echo smashes Bulgarian cybercrime gang
- 'Take responsibility for your own security' - IFG
- eBay reputation tarnished by breach response
- Apple's iCloud Activation Lock cracked
- HeartBleed - How we failed!
- EC3 chief: No barriers to cybercriminals' activity
- Australian Anonymous members in court
- Don't blame PCI - we need to deal with the card data
- Businesses urged to adopt 2FA after eBay breach
- Bulletproof servers foil botnet/malware takedowns
- FireEye report: defence-in-depth model 'deeply flawed'
- The threat of shared privileged accounts on social media
- eBay reacts to breach
- A Malicious Insider's Guide to Compromising Encrypted Networks
- China snubs Microsoft for ending XP security
- Applications Matter; So Should Application Security
- iBanking Android malware grows in power
- World Cup scammers use Twitter to steal gaming credentials
- Two in three companies 'blind' to data breaches
- BYOD 'bill of rights' could allay security fears
- Infections increasing with Ransomware, Kovter
- Learning to love the Cloud
- Chip and skim - major card security flaws
- US puts China in dock over cyber espionage
- 100 hackers arrested over Blackshades Trojan
- Fake AV apps spotted on Google Play, Windows Phone Store
- Encrypted web traffic quadruples in Europe
- Why web application security testing fails globally?
- SQL injection attacks still a major threat
- NCA public 'gaming' to increase cyber crime awareness
- pFragments Microsoft Office exploit resurfaces again
- US Senate reviews the security challenge of malvertising
- Microsoft expert: Tor security compromised by NSA
- Tech giants getting better at online privacy
- ICYMI: The right to be forgotten, NSA transparency and security nativity
- It's not about the money
- PrisonLocker ransomware 'practically harmless'
- Cyber attacks on Lockheed Martin quadruple
- Five-year-old Elderwood zero-day gang rides again
- Using analytics to secure your network
- Post Snowden, Obama privacy director backs NSA and GCHQ transparency
- Privacy International challenges GCHQ malware attacks
- Poland implements network of biometric ATMs
- PCI compliance - how basic website hygiene can add business value
- Ponemon - Smaller breaches likely; consultants a risk?
- Austria first non-NATO nation to join CDCE
- ICO report: Too many companies fail 'security basics'
- NSA plants backdoors in exported routers
- Reducing risk in a post-BlackBerry world
- Iran hackers start to hit defence industry
- EU backs 'right to be forgotten' in Google court case
- Thousands affected as phishers steal Google passwords
- G-Cloud: more to be done to make it work
- Russia-Ukraine conflict spills over into cyberspace?
- Microsoft to fix eight bugs, two critical, on Patch Tuesday
- Bitly embraces two-factor authentication after data breach
- Government classification scheme acts as learning point
- Breaking the refresh cycle
- UK firms 'shockingly' naive over security
- EU, Japan to fight cybercrime together
- Confusion reigns after Bitly data breach
- Tens of thousands of servers *still* vulnerable to Heartbleed
- ICYMI: "Dead" anti-virus, mobile ransomware; more EU DPA problems
- If you want my data, reward me
- Enterprise IT systems widely compromised
- Research firm says satcom terminals wide open to exploits
- Orange France hit by second customer data theft
- APTs: not as advanced as you might think
- iOS 7.1 flaw lets hacker access contacts book
- DDoS attacks: half of targeted firms get hit again
- Google and NSA: Friends with benefits?
- MI5 warns IT staff targetted by foreign agencies
- Phone 'tilt' sensors can be used to track you
- Hyperlinks flaw in Dropbox and Box documents
- EU cyber wargames already under fire
- Anti-virus is dead - but ghosts get chased
- Reducing risk by management of access privileges
- Monitoring the modern network environment
- PCs easily compromised, poorly patched
- Cloud confidence grows, but at what cost?
- London's poor wireless security exposed
- Islands of identity hard to track
- XP U-turn on zero-day attack
- GCHQ wants access to NSA surveillance data
- ICYMI: AOL data breach, fighting cybercrime, Target CISO and Windows XP
- Apple's iOS encryption claims 'are false'
- Android phone makers accused of ignoring security
- Raising the barrier to entry for hackers
- Third-party security risks follow Target data breach
- BYOD 'explosion' but security caveats exist for CYOD too
- CT Expo: 'White van man' adopts GPS jammers
- CT Expo: indentifying terrorists with digital forensics
- Red Teaming in the real world
- Security needs to look 10 years ahead
- THREAT OF THE MONTH: Drive-by downloads
- Movers and makers
- Debate: Is the EU Data Protection Act reform Necessary?
- Viewpoint: Transferring the risk
- Last word: Cracking the cyber crime code
- CeBIT 2014 sees Anglo-German cooperation
- Security of 'Things' to be embedded
- A long, hot summer looms
- The Growing Risk
- Healthy scepticism
- The view from the ground: Managing BYOD
- News briefs
- Cyber security: Speaking the CEO's Language
- SC Congress exceeds expectations
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SC Magazine UK Articles
- GCHQ urges organisations to ditch pointless password policies
- Jihadist cyber-attack on Cabinet was entirely avoidable, say experts
- The cost of a data breach and how to avoid paying it
- UK firms hit as Dridex criminals target 385 million emails
- FireEye: First multi-vendor ATM malware targeting cardholders
- Finance and HR: biggest data security risk according to new study
- Five myths of industrial control system security
- UK firms hit as Dridex criminals target 385 million emails
- Privileged identities are at the core of today's cyber attacks
- Why IT service management teams must play a key role in cyber resilience
- ICYMI: GCHQ Password advice; Jihadi cabinet attack; Dridex hits UK; MS Irish data; ATM malware
- Andrew Parker says MI5 needs greater cyber-security powers
- Russian government implicated in cyber-spying campaign by Dukes hacking group
- UK organisations are top targets for cyber-attackers, says report
- Researcher finds new, wirelessly exploitable vulnerability in iOS and OS X
