UK InfoSec Review for September 2012
Glasgow City Council
has lost 750 devices over the last five years according to an IT audit
- The Council incurred significant national
and local media criticism following discovery of 56 unencrypted laptops and 487
desktop PCs, also thought to be unencrypted, are unaccounted for. These were
also lost from an office in the City Chambers which contained about 17,000 bank
details. A reported theft in May, which the Information Commissioner is aware
of, led to the audit of all the council's IT hardware and revealed that almost
750 devices that are unaccounted for.
Microsoft
release emergency Security Patch for remote code execution flaw within
Internet Explorer
- Microsoft released an emergency patch for
the zero-day flaw in Internet Explorer on 21stSeptember 2012.
IPad led BYOD leaves gaping
holes in enterprise security
- Sophos
warn many firms are leaving themselves open to attack based on the findings
of Sophos' Warbike research.
- Quest
Software issue BYOD data warnings stating BYOD creates large holes within organisations due to the
unstructured nature of the network access.
Go
Daddy suffers four-hour outage following take down by Anonymous Hacker
- Anonymous has claimed responsibility for a hack on hosting provider and
registrar Go Daddy that caused it to have major service issues
Research highlights 20
per cent of IT staff access unauthorised executive data
- Almost 40% of IT staff can get unauthorised access to sensitive
information, and 20% admit to accessing executives' confidential data,
according to research. IT professionals are allowed to roam around corporate
networks unchecked, according to a survey of more than 450 IT professionals by
security software firm Lieberman Software.
Antisec
releases over a million Apple #UDID after Java-enabled FBI breach
- Over a million Apple Unique Device Identifiers (UDIDs) have been posted
online after hackers claimed to have obtained them from an FBI breach.
- The AntiSec hacking group said it had 1,000,001 Apple Devices UDIDs
linking to their users and their push notification service tokens. It said:
“The original file contained around 12,000,000 devices. We decided a million
would be enough to release. We trimmed out other personal data [such] as, full
names, cell numbers, addresses, zipcodes, etc. Not all devices have the same
amount of personal data linked.
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