Experts disagree on whether a bug in Adobe’s Reader PDF was caused by the same Chinese group that hacked into the systems of Google and other major companies late last year.
View full post on Computerworld Security News
Related Posts
- Poisoned Google image searches becoming a problem
If you are a regular user of Google's search engine you might have noticed that poisoned search results have practically become a common occurrence. Google has, of course, noticed this and does its be... - Trojans spread over Google Groups
May 12, 2010 The Russian anti-virus vendor Doctor Web warns users as cyber-criminals start spreading malicious programs over the Google Groups service. In particular user systems may get infected wi... - Google, Facebook duke it out over user data
Internet giants Google and Facebook have been having a war of words this week over user data portability. View full post on Network World on Security... - Stuxnet code hints at possible Israeli origin, researchers say
Security researchers today offered another tantalizing clue about the possible origins of the notorious Stuxnet worm, but cautioned against reading too much from the obscure tea leaves. View full p... - Google Sues Rogue Pharmacies Over Deceptive Advertising
Google on Tuesday filed suit against several "rogue pharmacies" that advertise and sell illegal pharmaceuticals on the Web. View full post on PCMag.com Security Coverage... - Consumer group lampoons Google CEO over privacy issues
Consumer Watchdog, a group that has been a sharp critic of Google's privacy practices in the past, is at it once again. View full post on Computerworld Security News... - South Korean Police Raid Google Offices Over Wi-Fi Sniffing
South Korean police have reportedly raided Google's offices in Seoul as part of their investigation into Google's unauthorized collection of unencrypted Wi-Fi data. View full post on PCMag.... - Report: South Korean Police Raid Google Offices Over Wi-Fi Sniffing
South Korean police have reportedly raided Google's offices in Seoul as part of their investigation into Google's unauthorized collection of unencrypted Wi-Fi data. View full post on PCMag.... - Google in the clear over UK WiFi snooping
The Information Commissioner's Office has said that Google did not grab "significant" amounts of personal data when photographing the UK with its StreetView cars, and that the i... - Google cleared over StreetView WiFi snooping
The data on WiFi access points gathered by Google in building its Streetview mapping system most likely did not include personal data, the UK Information Commissoner’s Office (ICO) has ruled. View ...



