Posted Friday July 28, 2006, 5:40 am, Over one day old
PC Magazine - The Internet security vendor patches a pair of bugs that could cause data manipulation, denial-of-service attacks or the exposure of sensitive information.
Read Symantec Fixes BrightMail AntiSpam Flaws
(PC Magazine)
(Links)
Posted Tuesday July 25, 2006, 6:21 am, Over one day old
Read Yahoo To Offer Norton Security Software
(NewsFactor)
(Links)
Posted Monday July 24, 2006, 7:19 am, Over one day old
PC Magazine - The United States may be slipping in the battle against spam e-mail, while spam production is increasing in Southeast Asia, according to a report from anti-virus vendor Sophos.
Read U.S., China Serving Up More Spam
(PC Magazine)
(Links)
Posted Tuesday July 25, 2006, 6:21 am, Over one day old
TechWeb - The United States remains the world's leading spam-generating country, a U.K.-based security company says.
Read U.S. Retains Spammy Nation Prize
(TechWeb)
(Links)
Posted Monday July 24, 2006, 7:19 am, Over one day old
PC Magazine - Opinion: Spammers can't be bothered to write proper software or clean up their lists, and the Internet is thus filled with phantom bits that can do nothing but clog the wires.
Read Wasted Spam Bits and the Lazy/Stupid Factor
(PC Magazine)
(Links)
Posted Monday July 24, 2006, 7:19 am, Over one day old
Read Picture this: A sneakier kind of spam
(USATODAY.com)
(Links)
Posted Friday July 14, 2006, 7:00 am, Over one day old
NewsFactor - Anyone with a blog or Web site can attest to the fact that spam has increasingly become the bane of the blogosphere and search engines. As a result, researchers at Microsoft Labs have developed a tool to seek out and stymie the efforts of the spammers.
Read Microsoft Touts Tool Against Blog Spam
(NewsFactor)
(Links)
Posted Friday July 14, 2006, 7:00 am, Over one day old
PC World - New tool is designed to prevent spammers from using search engines to drive traffic to spam URLs.
Read Microsoft Fights Web Spam
(PC World)
(Links)
Posted Friday July 14, 2006, 7:00 am, Over one day old
PC Magazine - Hackers are increasingly focusing their efforts on instant messaging applications, while spammers have shifted to filter-evading image-based e-mails, new research indicates.
Read IM Attacks and Image Spam Continue to Be Nuisances
(PC Magazine)
(Links)