Consumer fears over personal identity theft are rising because of the recession, a survey has found

Consumer fears over personal identity theft are rising because of the recession, a survey has found
The virtualisation giant is pretty pleased with its new "cloud OS", vSphere. Is it really that different from the competition. VMware's Reza Malekzadeh thinks so - and explained why.
Upgrade to virtual infrastructure product boosts fault-tolerance and expands to smaller businesses, as well as including networks and storage
Kaspersky manages to track down 200,000 actual IP addresses for the worm, but the total numer is in the millions
The Pirate Bay founders have been given prison sentences for enabling copyright theft. The verdict has been loudly protested, but Larry Seltzer says they got what they deserved
New OS for AlcaLu switches includes an end-point gatekeeper from InfoExpress
A Swedish Court has sentenced the four owners of The Pirate Bay to a year's prison and a £2.4 million fine
The security organisation founded by end-user chief security officers is focusing its attention on secure approaches to cloud computing
The UK government launched a campaign to use new technology to help beat the recession - amid a legal dispute with the EC over online privacy
Lenovo is encouraging the end of passwords taped to PCs, with its Hardware Password Manager, a server solution that enables IT to remotely manage a fleet of fully encrypted hard drives
The Apple iPhone 3.0 finally addresses security and emerges as a serious business smartphone, even if the BlackBerry is still better for email
Microsoft's OOXML formats are controversial - but the older Office formats will be a danger as security holes go unpatched, warns Larry Seltzer. Is this deliberate neglect?
Employing sophisticated tools such as memory-scraping malware and unique packet sniffers, organised crime led a record assault on databases in 2008
The new variant hooks itself deep within Windows to thwart efforts at spotting it
In a nod to the economic climate, the conference offered laid-off security pros scholarships to attend the event in 2009, and there will be a special workshop for job seekers and employers.
The UK Government failed to respond to privacy issues raised by BT's secret trials of the Phorm behavioural ad targetting system, according to Brussels
The latest security bulletins address issues being targeted by hackers in the wild, including vulnerabilities in Microsoft Office Excel and WordPad
Spam wastes enough energy to run 2.4 million homes, says a report designed to give more ammunition to anti-spam action
The recession is creating an army of disaffected ex-employees - many of whom will still have access to their former company's IT systems, warns Matt Hines
A 17-year old hacker is reportedly backing off after exposing vulnerabilties on the microblogging site
New Endpoint Platform and Client-Server suite should take out some of the legwork, company promises
An Amazon.com glitch reduced the sales rankings of 57,000 titles - but something isn't right about the story of the hacker who claimed to have caused the problem
Adobe's Flash player and Acrobat software were the top targets for hackers attempting to install malware on Europe's PCs during 2008, according to security researchers at Symantec.
Security professionals should try to add value to business and make new business models possible, instead of focusing on restricting users, says Mike Small of CA.
Experts contend the simple ability to map the electrical infrastructure is not the same as knowing how the system is operated or controlled
A court has ruled that Microsoft's piracy-busting Product Activation system used technology patented by someone else. Meanwhile it was fined in Germany over pricing
The hackers behind the infamous Conficker worm are making their move, roughly a week after many people expected
Storing and securing data more efficiently is the way IT managers are going to have to go during the recession
Foreign spies placed malware on the US electricity grid. Where does this leave government security, and the Green Grid?
From next week, Microsoft Windows XP and Office 2003 support and fixes will cost money. But that is much better than competitors' offerings, says Larry Seltzer - and that includes open source