Archive for December, 2009

Cyberspies Working Overtime to Upset U.S. Power Grid

Monday, December 14th, 2009

New threats to America’s power grid are surfacing daily. The folks at McAfee  spend most of their waking hours looking for ways to defend their clients from the never ending barrage of cyber-threats.

On the other hand, non- geeks simply want a worry-free, hacker-free Internet experience and we generally don’t care about the details of the international day to day battle of tech wits.

However, some tech experts on the front lines are alarmed these days. They have known about the foreign threat for years, but they have come to realize something that is both disturbing and revealing about our own willingness to fight back.

Elan Winkler over at McAfee surveyed 200 critical infrastructure IT professionals and discovered an eye opening attitude. These industry insiders blame cost and complacency for our predicament. Winkler states:

“So, if the people in the know, knew, how come we’re still vulnerable? I asked them that question as well. The number one answer: cost. Number two: complacency. No real surprises there; those are the same answers that we used to get from IT departments 15 years ago on why they didn’t have defense in depth technologies set up to protect servers and databases.”

The survey respondents also provided the following comments:

  • “There hasn’t been a real incident so no one takes it seriously.”
  • “Lack of knowledge and understanding.”
  • “Inability of decision makers to commit to security upgrades.”
  • “No one wants to pay for security.”
  • “False sense of security.”
  • “Security competes with other priorities for resources.”
  • “We, as Americans, believe we are invulnerable to this kind of attack.”

In neighborhoods across our great country,  most power outages are often simply a result of the forces of  Mother Nature. For example, a nasty December storm blew through our neighborhood just last night leaving about 700 homes in the dark, well into the night.

Imagine what could happen if our own complacency and budget constraints were to put the entire nation at risk.

Government’s job is to protect citizens from both foreign and domestic threats.  Our job is to support them in any way we can.

This pervasive, lazy attitude held by many inside the IT community, renders the term”computer geek” more laughable than it already is.

Identity Thief About To Pay the Piper

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Despite the conventional wisdom (including my own) which says most identity thieves never get caught, one high profile flim-flam artist is about to get the big chill.

According to a report originating from Denver’s NBC-TV news affiliate KUSA, one of the most prolific financial criminals in U.S. history is about to be sentenced to a maximum of up to 36 years in prison.

The person awaiting sentencing is 38 year old Shonya Young. Ms. Young was part of an identity theft ring that was busted after stealing the purse of the wife of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.

According to reports, Young is the person who actually  drained Mrs. Bernanke’s checking account after her purse was swiped from a Washington D.C. area Starbucks.

To lessen the chances that you could become the next victim, consider leaving the following items in a secure place and not in your purse, wallet or backpack:

- Checkbook
- Unused credit/debit cards
- Social Security card
- Passport

Three kinds of awareness are helpful here. The first is an awareness of your possessions including personal items like laptops, backpacks, wallets and purses.

Second, be aware of your physical surroundings involving transactional privacy while using smartphones, ATM’s  and WI-FI hotspots.

The third is financial reporting awareness, which comes from closely monitoring your credit card and banking statements to look for irregularities on at least a monthly basis.

There is no substitute for awareness coupled with action in order to detect, deflect and destroy the efforts of  identity thieves who are still out there lurking in the wings.