Going beyond popular hacker stereotypes, Symantec's Sarah Gordon says cyber-rebels aren't evil--they're just misunderstood.
Yet again denial-of-service attacks, spam, viruses - driven in part by an apparent war between virus writers - and cybercrime have hit the headlines over the course of the past 12 months.
A virus that can spread between Windows and Linux machines means that antivirus programmers may have to rethink their defences.
It doesn't appear that Symantec CEO John Thompson's next computer will run Windows.
The peer-to-peer file sharing program Kazaa is the biggest spyware threat on the Internet, according to a security firm.
Google stitched up some gaping holes in its desktop search software recently but the nature of the tool's design means that the contents of users' hard drives will remain under constant threat of exposure.
SPECIAL REPORT Old viruses shouldn't be thought of as dead and gone but merely lying dormant.
Instances of infected smart phones are almost nonexistent, according to a mobile phone support exec.
Virus writers are merging spam, phishing and Trojan programs to develop more complex attacks on the unwary.
Microsoft confirmed on Monday that German authorities had arrested a man suspected of writing and releasing a program widely used to surreptitiously control computers on the Internet.
A year on, and the company's US$1 million tip-off program has nabbed just one (alleged) virus writer. Is it a bust?
From the reaction to Friday's column --in which I kiddingly called for death to virus writers--it's easy to tell who has had to deal with viruses and who hasn't. People who've spent hours, even days, undoing the work of these computer terrorists, whose crimes inflict tremendous damage on people they can't possibly know, seem to appreciate my viewpoint more than most.
Viruses may be on the decline this year, but other threats--like Trojan horses and spyware--are on the rise. We tell you how these pests work--and how to protect your system from harm.
New technology such as MP3s may soon be used as vectors for viruses, a security expert has warned.
Virus writers are merging spam, phishing and Trojan programs to develop more complex attacks on the unwary.
An obscure messaging feature in Windows could be the latest source of security problems for Internet users, experts have warned.
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