Cyber Security

#74
Microsoft computers taken down by hackers

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...aken-down-by-hackers/articleshow/18640498.cms

SAN FRANCISCO: Microsoft joined Facebook and Apple on Friday on the list of US technology titans targeted in recent cyberattacks.
"As reported by Facebook and Apple, Microsoft can confirm that we also recently experienced a similar security intrusion," Trustworthy Computing team general manager Matt Thomlinson said in a blog post.

"During our investigation, we found a small number of computers, including some in our Mac business unit, that were infected by malicious software using techniques similar to those documented by other organisations."

There was no evidence customer data was stolen but an investigation into the attack was continuing, according to Thomlinson.

"This type of cyberattack is no surprise to Microsoft and other companies that must grapple with determined and persistent adversaries," he said.

Apple on Tuesday said that hackers invaded its system in an attack similar to one recently carried out against Facebook, but that it repelled the intruders before its data was plundered.

The maker of iPhones, iPads, iPods and Macintosh computers said it was working with law enforcement officials to hunt down the hackers, who appeared tied to a series of recent cyberattacks on US technology firms.

"The malware was employed in an attack against Apple and other companies, and was spread through a website for software developers," Apple told AFP.

The malicious software, or malware, took advantage of a vulnerability in a Java program used as a "plug-in" for web-browsing programmes.

A "small number" of computer systems at Apple were infected but they were isolated from the main network, according the Silicon Valley-based company.

"There is no evidence that any data left Apple," Apple said.

Word of hackers hitting Apple came just days after leading social network Facebook said it was "targeted in a sophisticated attack" last month, but that no user data was compromised.

Facebook said malware that infected some of its machines came from a mobile developer website that had been booby-trapped.

Early this month, Twitter said it was hammered by a cyberattack similar to those that recently hit major Western news outlets, and that the passwords of about 2,50,000 users were stolen.

While those behind the attacks had yet to be identified, computer security industry specialists have expressed suspicions about China-sponsored hackers and Eastern European crime gangs.
 

DanPickUp

Well-Known Member
#78
Hi

If you are a Facebook user be informed that you face the danger to be infected from the following Trojan: Trojan-Dropper.Win32.Dorifel.chl

The Trojan is not new, but since a few days it works strongly through Facebook. How? People are asked to open a certain page and by opening that page, the Trojan automatically is downloaded and installs himself in your system. In further acts it will contact all your friends through the chat section. At the moment the chat section is closed, it will be stored in your message box.

Here a short video about the Trojan, what it is and how it works and how you can remove it from your system, in case you are affected. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1NK_u9r2tME
 

DanPickUp

Well-Known Member
#79
Hi

If you use Windows 8 and miss the old start menu, here a solution to that:

Highly customizable start menu with multiple styles and skins
Start button for Windows 7 and Windows 8
Toolbar and status bar for Windows Explorer
Caption and status bar for Internet Explorer

http://www.classicshell.net/

By the way: Time to update again Java and Adobe flash player in case you did not do it in last few days.
 

DanPickUp

Well-Known Member
#80
Hi

Have you ever been in the past in a situation you are not sure about a program or process in your system and you wanted to delete it. But as you try, you always get the message: Not possible to delete as it is connected to an other process or program.

You then went to the folder the file is placed and here you saw a file with the end: dll. So now you know, that such files you not just can delete as they are system relevant. But you want to get rid of that file. How to move on?

Took me a while to find it out and here is the solution which really works:

If you know that you still not need that file as it is from a test program for example, you follow exactly and each step shown in the following video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmEz9DJZ7Ss

Had a program folder with many such dll files I wanted to get rid of and after doing the way shown in the video, I finally could delete all of them. :)
 

Similar threads