schneier claimed
Storm botnet 'services' for hire?
News While it has continued to grow since then, it is difficult to gauge its true size as a large percentage of the infected machines are on 'stand-by', according to security expert Bruce Schneier. At the beginning of October, Schneier wrote in a blog... [17 Oct 2007]
Biometric passport cracked and cloned
News According to security guru Bruce Schneier, Grunwald's job was made all the more easy by the publication of standards for ePassports on the website of the International Civil Aviation Organisation. The biggest problem, Schneier wrote on his blog, is... [04 Aug 2006]
Schneier: 'Blame firms not staff for security breaches'
News Schneier claimed education, touted by the likes of Chapman, is not the way forward as most employees will have undergone in-house training and attended security briefings where the information clearly "didn't stick". [21 Feb 2006]
MP calls for UK e-crime tsar
News However, some security experts - including Bruce Schneier - aren't convinced that cyber terrorism is a serious threat. Speaking last week, Schneier said: "I think that the terrorist threat is over-hyped, and the criminal threat is under-hyped. [29 Nov 2005]
'Criminals, not terrorists, pose greatest net threat'
News Security expert Bruce Schneier has warned that talk of cyber terrorism could have a damaging effect on levels of IT security. Schneier said officials claiming that terrorists pose a serious danger to computer networks are guilty of distracting... [24 Nov 2005]
Should security companies be regulated?
News Microsoft is not in the business of being a charity and that's why its software is buggy," said Schneier, who claimed companies choose time-to-market and cost savings over security. Bruce Schneier, CTO of Counterpane, told silicon.com legislators... [19 Oct 2005]
'Cyberterrorists poised to attack', warns Labour peer
News At another briefing at Infosecurity Europe, security guru Bruce Schneier claimed that cyberterrorism was a myth, promoted by security companies looking to boost their sales. Nobody's getting blown to bits," said Schneier. [28 Apr 2005]
