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WHTop → 📋 News → About 200K Servers Remain with Heartbleed Unpatched
Jan, 2017 : About 200K Servers Remain with Heartbleed Unpatched
📅 - An Open-SSL flaw has yet to be patched on about 200,000 servers, according to Shodan, a connected devices search engine. The Heartbleed Report was released this past weekend showing 52,000 Apache HTTPD servers with vulnerability and exposure.
About one in five of the vulnerable servers are found in the United States and AWS hosting has the highest number of servers followed by Verizon.
Originally, the vulnerability was disclosed about three years ago and a fix was released in April 2014. About half of the vulnerable servers, at the time, were secured by June 2014.
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Reads: 1142 | Category: General | Source: TheHN : The Hosting News
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📅 - HostingCon Global 2017 to Feature Keynote Hacker - Kevin Mitnick has been named as the keynote for HostingCon Global 2017 in April. Mitnick is a known white hat hacker and a security consultant. HostingCon Global joins many professionals across the data center, cloud and hosting industries. It will run from April 3rd to 6th in Los Angeles, California.
Mitnick is the CEO of Mitnick Security and a chief white hat hacker. He has spoken many times on social engineering and cybersecurity. Mitnick has even spoken publically about some of the things from his days as a black hat hacker.
Victims of these attacks range all the way from Wendy's Co. to the Democratic National Committee. Even with more aggressive cyber-security spending, these attacks still happened. Many even believe the number of breaches is even higher as many go unreported or even undiscovered.
Everything from login names and passwords to social security numbers were exposed during data breaches in 2016. Phishing was one of the leading types of attacks representing 56%, which is up from 38% in 2015.
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📅 - SEC Will Investigate Yahoo Due to Hacks - The Wall Street Journal has reported that The Securities and Exchange Commission in the United States will investigate Yahoo Inc. The reason for the investigation comes from the well documented data hacks the company suffered over the past few years.
This investigation could provide a blueprint on how companies are expected to respond to data hacks. It should provide some guidance to the SEC when handling these types of situations.
Yahoo suffered a massive data breach in 2014 with about 500 million accounts hacked. Another breach had happened in 2013, which impacted about 1 billion accounts. The 2014 breach wasn't reported by Yahoo to the public or their investors until two years later.
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📅 - Facebook Data Center Hardware Going to Market - Recently, a group of network software and hardware companies have decided to bring a data center network hardware designed by Facebook to market. The first public demo of the OS running on configurations of what is known as Facebook's Backpack and Wedge 100 switch platforms was delivered on Tuesday by Cumulus Networks.
Cumulus plans to make Backpack configurations with Linux pre-loaded. Pre-ordering has already started and this is the first modular system to be running Cumulus. ...
📅 - Microsoft Wants to Defend the Constitutional Rights of Customers - Microsoft is trying to halt the sneak-and-peak searches the FBI wants to do of e-mails. The ability to stop this from happening may depend on the company's ability to defend the constitutional rights of customers.
A judge in charge of deciding if the case will move forward told attorneys to be prepared in court on Monday. Microsoft has a lot at stake with this case. If they win, it will block the United States from secretly looking at customer data stored in the cloud, which includes email.
Tech leaders, such as Amazon.com, Google and Apple have supported Microsoft since they file the lawsuit in April. These companies all believe the future of cloud computing and mobile depend on the priva