Archive for July, 2010

New 888-software powered bingo site

July 31st, 2010

Bingo Me Happy.com is owned by UK firm 15 Marketing Limited

888.com’s Gibraltar-licensed bingo software provider Brigend Limited has reported the launch of another of its clients, branded Bingo Me Happy.com.

The new site is owned by Hertfordshire, UK-based 15 Marketing Limited.

Managing director Ben Star says that the company is running an active affiliate marketing program, and preferred to spend risk-free money on affiliates instead of high-risk money on diverse internet marketing projects that could easily produce ridiculous cost per actions and hardly any income.

“Keeping 70 percent of lots is far better than keeping one hundred percent of nothing,” said Star in unveiling an affiliate program that proposes 50 percent commissions, settling down to a minimum of 30 percent once the launch phase had been completed.

“Bingo Me Happy.com’s affiliate costs are purely a percentage of the revenues, so by adopting an aggressive program there is still zero risk of making a loss,” he said. “We will happily put our revenue share offers down on paper and sign them.”

Source:http://www.recentpoker.com/news/888bingo-8885.html

Is ’social engineering’ better than software skills to hack into computers?

July 31st, 2010

Hackers at DefCon are gathering to prove that smooth talk works better than software skills any day, in order to launch a computer network attack.

The contest challenges hackers to call workers at 10 companies including technology titans Google, Apple, Cisco, and Microsoft and get them to reveal too much information to strangers.

Other companies targeted were Pepsi, Coca Cola, Shell, BP, Ford, and Proctor and Gamble.

One employee was conned into providing specifications regarding types of software being used, details that would let a hacker tailor viruses to launch at the system.

“You often have to crack through firewalls and burn the perimeter in order to get into the internal organisation,” News.com.au quoted Mati Aharoni of Offensive Security, a company that tests company computer defences, as saying.

“It is much easier to use social engineering techniques to get to the same place,” he added.

“We wanted to show that social engineering is a legitimate attack vector.”

One worker nearly foiled a hacker by insisting he send his questions in an email that would be reviewed and answered if appropriate, but the hacker convinced him not to do that, saying he was under ‘immense pressure’.

“As humans, we naturally want to help other people. I’m not advocating not helping people. Just think about what you say before you say it,” said Offensive Security operations manager Christopher Hadnagy. (ANI)

Source:http://story.malaysiasun.com/index.php/ct/9/cid/d805653303cbbba8/id/666651/cs/1/

Software developers ignore microsoft security warnings

July 31st, 2010

Microsoft reports that third party software developers patched only 45 percent of the flaws the company’s security team reported to them between July 2009 and June 2010.

“The newest number, however, was more than triple that during the year-long stretch through June 2009, when developers patched a measly 13 percent of the bugs Microsoft reported,” writes Computerworld’s Gregg Keizer.

“Microsoft did not reveal the number of vulnerabilities its engineers found and reported to other companies in last 12 months, but did note that 97 percent of the bugs were rated by Microsoft as either ‘critical’ or ‘important,’ the company’s two highest threat rankings in its four-step scoring system,” Keizer writes.

Source:http://www.esecurityplanet.com/headlines/article.php/3895981/article.htm

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