
The Latest Internet Security NEWS or THREATS:
If you have a student in Granville County Middle
Schools you have probably been
warned about MYSPACE.COM a website where many students go and put personal
information
to meet friends or converse with classmates. Unfortunately this site has
been linked in over three
cases with sexual predators who look for information in children's ads like "I
live
in Oxford NC.., or I am a student at Northern Granville Middle School"
Often children publish pictures of themselves on these sites..,
A sick person needs only to associate a face and where they go to school AND...,
Come after your child..,
Please speak to your children about the dangers of
putting private information
on a website that ANYONE can view
Look in their bookmark files for myspace.com or do even
better MONITOR your
children's time on a computer It keeps them safe and you sane!
_____________________________________________________________________
Instant messaging security threats are growing by 50
per cent each
month and could potentially spread across the globe in seconds.
According to research from anti-virus firm F-Secure,
virus writers are targeting instant messaging application due to their ability
to spread malicious code faster than email worms.
Where as the Sasser email worm took 14 minutes to
compromise
95 per cent of all vulnerable PCs around the world,
instant messaging worms could infect all IM using computers in just 14 seconds.
The anti-virus firm claims to have detected 200 instant messaging worms,
plus more than 700 trojans, backdoors and password stealers that target the
application.
'IM worms don't waste time scanning machines that are
not infectable
they only target other IM using machines,' said Patrick Runald, technical
manager at F-Secure.
With analyst firm IDC predicting that 506 million people will use instant
messaging by 2008,
this could present new security concerns for IT departments.
'As IM grows and comes into corporations it could
become more of a risk,' said Runald.
Mikko Hypponen, F-Secure's director of anti-virus
research,
told Computing that more than 50 per cent of last year's largest viruses were
designed
by criminals to make money and that mobile viruses could become a greater focus
for organised crime outfits.
'PCs don't have in-built billings systems but mobile
phones do,' said Hypponen.
'Mobile malware can be designed to infect phones and message premium rate toll
numbers.
You'll only find out about it when you get your next phone bill.'