US seeks patriotic computer geeks for help in cyber crisis – China Daily


China Daily

US seeks patriotic computer geeks for help in cyber crisis
China Daily
The US Department of Homeland Security is considering setting up a "Cyber Reserve" of computer security experts who could be called upon in the event of a crippling cyberattack. The idea came from a task force the agency set up to address what has long
Following Sandy, DHS seeks security 'Cyber Reserve'InfoWorld
Canadians need to be more cyber aware, expert warnsOttawa Citizen
DHS Wants to Develop 'Cyber Reserve' After Observing Sandy's ImpactGovernment Technology
ExecutiveGov
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Madi, Gauss, Flame: Year’s most sophisticated malware – Rediff


Rediff

Madi, Gauss, Flame: Year's most sophisticated malware
Rediff
During the year 2012 the most significant of the cyber espionage incidents were related to the activity of Madi, Gauss and Flame malware, which were distributed primarily in the Middle East. One campaign related to penetrating computer systems went on

flame malware – read more

‘Flame’ virus offshoot burns high-profile victims – VentureBeat


VentureBeat

'Flame' virus offshoot burns high-profile victims
VentureBeat
Researchers announced a new malware called miniFlame today that may be monitoring and stealing data from specific, highly profitable victims. It is a sister to the Flame malware that made headlines earlier this year. The malware was found by Kaspersky

flame malware – read more

Rebuilding the Computer from Scratch to Defeat Cyber Warfare

The consequence has come to pass in the form of an epidemic of computer malware and rising concerns about cyberwarfare as a threat to global security, voiced alarmingly this month by the defense secretary, Leon E. Panetta, who warned of a possible “cyber-Pearl Harbor” attack on the United States.

It is remarkable, then, that years after most of his contemporaries have retired, Dr. Neumann is still at it and has seized the opportunity to start over and redesign computers and software from a “clean slate.”

He is leading a team of researchers in an effort to completely rethink how to make computers and networks secure, in a five-year project financed by the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or Darpa, with Robert N. Watson, a computer security researcher at Cambridge University’s Computer Laboratory.

“I’ve been tilting at the same windmills for basically 40 years,” said Dr. Neumann recently during a lunchtime interview at a Chinese restaurant near his art-filled home in Palo Alto, Calif. “And I get the impression that most of the folks who are responsible don’t want to hear about complexity. They are interested in quick and dirty solutions.”

Source:  NYT > Science