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Posts with tag threat

Superbowl stadium site hacked to infect PCs


Mega-events are high-security animals. When something like the Super Bowl goes on in a city, everyone from the local Sheriff to the FBI and Homeland Security are involved in keeping the visitors and fans safe from any real or perceived threat imaginable but, the digital world isn't quite as safe. Someone forgot to lock up the website belonging to Dolphin Stadium, this year's Superbowl host. Websense warns in a threat alert, "A link to a malicious javascript file has been inserted into the header of the front page of the [Dolphin Stadium] site. Visitors to the site execute the script, which attempts to exploit two [recent Windows] vulnerabilities: MS06-014 and MS07-004. Both of these exploits attempt to download and execute a malicious file."

What a reminder that exactly this type of site presents a disproportionate security threat. When a site that has a relatively low volume of traffic on average becomes host to a large swarm of users, it also drastically increases its threat profile. Translation: You might as well paint a target on the side and hand out boxes of bullets.

ZDnet adds that the official Dolphin Stadium website has been cleared of the exploit but also cautions that a site with a simillar name was targeted and hasn't been fixed or taken offline.

Feds obtain Gmail records after hate mail sent to NAACP

Feds obtain Gmail records after hate mail sent to NAACPThe FBI has requested - and obtained - records from Google pertaining to a Gmail account that was used to send threatening email to the NAACP. Information was requested of Google on June 22nd, 2006, after the email was sent to the NAACP one month earlier, on May 22nd. Through some digital sleuthing, the feds tracked the email to one Randall C. Ashby II of New York state.

Some reports on this matter are incorrectly stating that the feds had to search Google's headquarters and obtain this information themselves. According to eWeek, this is not true; Google apparently cooperated and offered this information of their own accord in compliance with the law, as Mr. Ashby II's act was a violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 875c (Interstate Communication of a Threat).

[via Gmail.pro]

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