8/3/2011 1:45:47 AM
those guys just don't give a what
8/3/2011 1:46:54 AM
8/3/2011 1:48:34 AM
8/3/2011 1:49:53 AM
So McAfee "discovered" these intrusionsI bet they can sell the stuff to stop them also, right?
8/3/2011 9:41:17 AM
How did McAfee make this discovery, I wonder? Just curious if they'll give a methodology.
8/3/2011 9:42:21 AM
^
8/3/2011 10:00:05 AM
mcafee's network security products and teams (largely acquired and having nothing to do with shitty AV software) are actually top notch. i've met some of their lead architects and they know their shit. with this in mind and having spoken to my friend at length who works in SecOps at google, this is highly likely.[Edited on August 3, 2011 at 10:03 AM. Reason : .]
8/3/2011 10:02:24 AM
In related news, I reported Obama for spam based on my twitter feed late last week.
8/3/2011 10:08:38 AM
8/3/2011 10:32:33 AM
8/3/2011 12:20:25 PM
if i was a fortune 2000 company i would just clone my entire data setup with dummy info and hold a hacking competition for big prize money, specifically inviting Anonymous and Lulzsec. They have no reason to go after a company who is willing to listen to improve their security and besides that it's much better to get poked in the eye (Anonymous) than stabbed in the back (China)
8/3/2011 1:42:35 PM
i guess this security stuff just baffles me. is it laziness on the part of companies, inexperience, bad equipment, bad software? why can't we get ahead of these guys
8/3/2011 2:13:52 PM
i always figured it was either the almighty dollar as in a risk/cost type analysis or a CEO that doesn't care what those geeks in IT do he just wants to pay someone cheap to do it
8/3/2011 2:20:09 PM
The real question is what was hacked, was it standard servers or mainframes? The prevailing though is that no one has hacked a mainframe before (or at least claimed to have - which if you do it, you think someone claims it), so if they got through its security, much scarier as that opens a whole new set of doors since most critical banking, stocks, medical, etc records are housed on the mainframe.
8/3/2011 7:14:40 PM
while there is tons of mainframe stuff still going on (half my company's revenue comes from it) the data these mainframes use is accessible outside the mainframe world and makes the necessity to hack z/OS almost non-existent.
8/3/2011 7:19:29 PM
^^^[Edited on August 3, 2011 at 7:21 PM. Reason : it's all just a big cost-benefit analysis]
8/3/2011 7:20:26 PM
Could be social engineering too, there's only so much you can do to control that.
8/3/2011 7:25:17 PM