Citadel malware now targets password management applications
Attackers have started using the Citadel Trojan program to steal master passwords for password management applications and other authentication programs.
Attackers have started using the Citadel Trojan program to steal master passwords for password management applications and other authentication programs.
A new Trojan program designed to steal log-in credentials and other financial information from online banking websites is being advertised to cybercriminal groups on the underground market.
Someday, if you use your non-dominant hand to control your mouse or touchpad when you're say, shopping online, websites might interpret your irregular scrolling and clicking as a sign of fraud and require you to prove your identity, thanks to an IBM fraud-detection patent.
A new computer Trojan that targets users of 450 financial institutions from around the world appears to borrow functionality and features directly from the notorious Zeus and Carberp malware programs.
There's been much discussion in the security industry that preventing malware-based infiltrations into the enterprise is nigh on impossible, and the new security mantra should be "rapid detection is the new prevention." On that, IBM begs to differ.
A new financial malware program that communicates with attackers over the I2P (Invisible Internet Project) anonymity network is for sale on a Russian cybercrime forum.
IBM Wednesday announced an agreement to acquire Fiberlink Communications, saying the purchase is a key part of a broader mobile-security strategy to provide assurance in transactions conducted via devices such as iPhones and Android smartphones.
A new variant of the Ramnit financial malware is using local Web browser injections in order to steal log-in credentials for Steam accounts, according to researchers from security firm Trusteer.
IBM has signed an agreement to acquire security company Trusteer, and plans to set up a cybersecurity software lab in Israel.
Hardly a day goes by without a new security threat emerging. Traditional security tools aren't always up to the task of keeping sensitive business information in safe hands. These six innovations will help you stay a step ahead.
Banking transactions for owners of <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/110910-google-android-useful-resources-smartphones.html">Android</a> phones just became more dangerous with a new iteration of the <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2011/072611-spyeye-trojan-morphs-to-defeat.html">SpyEye</a> Trojan designed to intercept two-factor authentication codes sent via SMS -- the first known version for Android.
The SpyEye hacking toolkit has added an Android component that collects the text messages some banks use as an extra security precaution, a researcher said today.
Sister companies, the Clydesdale and Yorkshire Banks, have become the latest UK financial operations to secure online banking access for retail customers using <a href="http://www.trusteer.com/">Trusteer's Rapport browser plug-in</a>.
Chief technology officer of Trusteer, Amit Klein, has spoken about the trends of mobile malware, citing mobile banking as the next big threat to the industry.
Spotting notorious Trojans like SpyEye and <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/120810-trojan-bank.html">ZeuS</a> on compromised desktop computers is the goal of a new <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/topics/security.html">security</a> service from Trusteer.