Computer security experts warn Microsoft Internet Explorer users to switch … – Ottawa Citizen


Livemint

Computer security experts warn Microsoft Internet Explorer users to switch
Ottawa Citizen
BOSTON — Computer security experts are urging PC users to temporarily stop browsing the Web with Microsoft Corp's Internet Explorer, saying a newly identified bug in the software makes computers susceptible to attack by hackers. “Bad guys can use this
Security experts warn of bug in Microsoft's Web browserReuters
German cybersecurity agency urges users to ditch IEComputerworldUK
Microsoft Urges Users to Patch Internet Explorer FlaweWeek

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Brand-new hardware — now with malware pre-installed! – InfoWorld (blog)


CBS News

Brand-new hardware — now with malware pre-installed!
InfoWorld (blog)
I'm talking about hardware infected before it ships to users or PC sellers. In recent court filings and a white paper (PDF), Microsoft revealed that four of 20 brand-new computers bought in China contained malware out of the box. Each of the four
Beware of pre-installed malware on your new PCCBS News
Microsoft discovers Chinese malware pre-installed on new PCsComputerworld New Zealand
Microsoft disrupts botnet spread through preinstalled malwareFierceCIO
Gizmodo Australia –Newstrack India –ABC Action News
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Bromium secures computers by holding apps in isolation

Bromium, is releasing software today that could mean the end of computer malware as we know it. They call the software product vSentry and they call the underlying tech the Bromium microvisor.

Essentially this tech gives you a “disposable virtual computer” for every task you do on a Windows PC, cofounder Gaurav Banga told Business Insider. (They will have a version for Macs, too, in a couple of months.)

Think of it like having a thin sheet of glass between each Window and the guts of your PC. So when you go to Facebook, you get a piece of glass, when you check e-mail, you get a new piece of glass and so on. If your computer picks up a virus from e-mail or the ‘net, no matter. It can’t bust through the glass and infect the actual computer. The virus dies when you close the window.

Source: Startup Bromium Could End Computer Viruses Forever

What if you could remove every single restriction, compliance measure, and black list from your IT policy without adding risk to your enterprise?

All software is vulnerable, and all users make mistakes. The result is a recipe for disaster. And so the challenge for IT has always been this: How do we limit risk to the enterprise without disempowering users or damaging their productivity?

In other words, how do we deliver a desktop that embraces both security and freedom?

With Bromium micro-virtualization, we now have an answer: A desktop that is utterly secure and a joy to use. Micro-virtualization uses hardware isolation to securely allow untrustworthy desktop tasks to safely coexist with trusted enterprise applications and data – without risk, with an unchanged user experience.

Inspired by the isolation principles of traditional virtualization, the Bromium Microvisor uses hardware virtualization to automatically, instantly and invisibly isolate each untrustworthy task within a tiny micro-VM that has no access to enterprise data or networks, and which cannot modify the desktop.

Bromium

Flame malware continues to burn – PCWorld


PCWorld

Flame malware continues to burn
PCWorld
Over the past couple of years a new breed of malware has been making headlines. These new attacks are very complex, and seem to be directed at precision targets of national or military significance—suggesting that they've been developed by nation
Coders Behind the Flame Malware Left Incriminating Clues on Control ServersWired (blog)
Flame Malware Details Surface, Point to More VirusesPC Magazine
Flame Malware Investigation: More Evidence Of Espionage WeaponCRN
iT News –TechNewsWorld –Threatpost (blog)
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