Bye Bye IE!
Bye Bye IE! http://t.co/Cpw9iY0g2t …
#SS
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) March 18, 2015
from Twitter http://ift.tt/1nhrYAw
Bye Bye IE! http://t.co/Cpw9iY0g2t …
#SS
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) March 18, 2015
What could possibly go wrong? “@Bruce_Schneier: Cell Phone Kill Switches Mandatory in California http://t.co/sFTm3CTtLY” #ss
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) August 30, 2014
One for the password shame file: “@Viss: sigh. Multi million dollar security program. They still don't get it. http://ift.tt/1qOfMfk” #ss
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) August 29, 2014
NSA's homegrown Google, mega metadata searching!: https://t.co/5ZCMX1stjc #ss
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) August 29, 2014
Use google? You may be a hacker! “@briankrebs: DHS: Only you can prevent Google-dorking http://t.co/IZEVQV6TdM” #ss
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) August 28, 2014
Somehow I'm not surprised... “@troyhunt: Hackers Unmask Anonymous Posters On Secret, Including App's Founder http://t.co/obQQjzuvpl” #ss
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) August 24, 2014
Great talk. Tackling the software security problem at the root. http://t.co/XD2qEAwcMm #infosec #education #ss
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) August 24, 2014
Gmail gets the headline, but other android apps also vulnerable: http://t.co/hWGzPJsFLn #infosec #android #ss
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) August 24, 2014
Fear of fines not improving security - fear of bad publicity is? http://t.co/PIbMgtzcdt #infosec #reputationrisk #ss
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) August 24, 2014
Aquaman in top 3 superheroes used by cybercrims.1st time ever a top 3 list except "heroes who talk to fish" http://t.co/DuyNlsjZua #ss
— JRK (@jrkurosawa) August 22, 2014
While playing with my new ipad, I can across an interesting article on The Last Watchdog about the US Federal Trade Commission's complaint against Twitter.
I'd read about twitter's security breach in April last year where an employee's personal email account was hacked and provided admin passwords to the social networking site, but had somehow missed the earlier breach where apparently nothng more complicated than a brute force attack revealed the site's weak, lower case, common dictionary word administrative password!
From the article some of the major points from the FTC's complaint are Twtter's failure to:
Additonally Twitter are "barred for 20 years from misleading consumers about the extent to which it protects the security, privacy, and confidentiality of nonpublic consumer information, including the measures it takes to prevent unauthorized access to nonpublic information and honor the privacy choices made by consumers. The company also must establish and maintain a comprehensive information security program, which will be assessed by an independent auditor every other year for 10 years".
- Requiring employees to use hard-to-guess administrative passwords that are not used for other programs, websites, or networks
- Prohibiting employees from storing administrative passwords in plain text within their personal e-mail accounts
- Suspending or disabling administrative passwords after a reasonable number of unsuccessful login attempts
- Providing an administrative login webpage that is made known only to authorized persons and is separate from the login page for users
- Enforcing periodic changes of administrative passwords by, for example, setting them to expire every 90 days
- Restricting access to administrative controls to employees whose jobs required it
- Imposing other reasonable restrictions on administrative access, such as by restricting access to specified IP addresses
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed here are those of the authors only and in no way represent the views, positions, or opinions of any previous, current, or future employers, clients, or associates.