Wikileaks to stop publishing classified files
Wikileaks is set to stop publishing classified files, following a "blockade" by US finance companies.
Wikileaks is set to stop publishing classified files, following a "blockade" by US finance companies.
Whistleblower Web site Wikileaks today announced that it has temporarily suspended operations due to financial constraints.
Bank of America's home page has chalked up four days in a row of intermittent access problems for which it has diagnosed the cause but won't reveal it.
Sean Catlett, the former director of security at online gambling site Betfair has left the company, following a hacking incident which saw cybercriminals <a href="http://www.computerworlduk.com/news/security/3307434/betfair-hides-credit-card-data-hack-from-customers/">steal 3.15 million customer account details</a>.
Bank of America has named Patrick Gorman, a veteran government and corporate technology executive, as its new chief information security officer.
Bank of America (BofA) has said that a "routine systems change" had caused its online banking service to go offline on Friday - not a Wikileaks attack.
Bank of America has assembled a 15- to 20-person team to come up with a damage control plan in the event Wikileaks follows through on its promise to release thousands of insider documents leaked to it, according to reports.
Apple yesterday pulled an iPhone app from the App Store that let users read secret U.S. diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks and follow the controversial organization's Twitter feed.
Bank of America has joined the growing list of financial and technology companies that have cut off services to WikiLeaks, a move that comes amid speculation that the whistleblower site is preparing to release information about the bank.
A Bank of America computer specialist is set to plead guilty to charges that he hacked the bank's automated tellers to dispense cash without recording the activity.
Is the project still on target?