dublin virus bulletin

Mobile porn at risk of DoS attacks, says Gartner

News Speaking at the Virus Bulletin conference in Dublin, Graham Cluley of Sophos questioned whether malicious hackers would be able to target mobile phones in the same network cell. Network operators and companies looking to provide pornography or... [25 Oct 2005]

The Weekly Round-Up: 14.10.05

Round-Up Speaking of security - a revelation from Virus Bulletin in Dublin last week, which occurred too late to make the Round-Up last time, saw David Perry from Trend Micro laying into the media. The Round-Up comes in for more than its fair share of... [14 Oct 2005]

Spyware threat escalating, warn experts

News Presenting at the Virus Bulletin conference in Dublin, Chien also detailed the ways in which spyware can get onto a machine. Spyware is becoming increasingly pernicious and sophisticated, according to security experts who are warning that users are... [11 Oct 2005]

Photos: How does spyware get on your PC?

Photo Speaking at the Virus Bulletin 2005 conference in Dublin, Eric Chien, senior antivirus researcher at Symantec, outlines the common ways users are picking up spyware. Pop-up windows which suggest security updates and clock settings are available, or... [11 Oct 2005]

The Weekly Round-Up: 07.10.05

Round-Up Back to the subject of students, one member of the silicon.com team was over in Dublin this week for the Virus Bulletin 2005 conference where a PhD student from the University of Calgary caused a bit of a stir. [07 Oct 2005]

Security firms put the boot into the media

News At this week's Virus Bulletin 2005 conference in Dublin, a panel session featuring representatives from IBM, McAfee and Symantec turned nasty for the assembled press with vendors airing grievances about what they consider to be "a layer of... [07 Oct 2005]

Are online firms doing secret deals with DDoS attackers?

News Speaking at Virus Bulletin 2005 in Dublin, malware specialist at IBM, Martin Overton, said the DDoS scams, which typically target companies that rely upon peaks of online transactions such as internet bookmakers, are still a major money spinner... [06 Oct 2005]

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