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Symantec

Biggest Attack on Apple Computers Didn't Pay Off, Symantec Says

posted onMay 17, 2012
by l33tdawg

Symbolically, last month’s news of a hacking attack on more than 600,000 Mac computers sent a loud message: Apple products are now vulnerable to the same kind of mass infections that Microsoft Windows computers are.

Financially, however, it was the equivalent of a bounced check — a big flop that likely netted the criminals nothing, according to new research from Symantec.

Facebook announce Antivirus Marketplace

posted onApril 26, 2012
by l33tdawg

Facebook officials are launching a site on their social network aimed at making their 900 million-plus users and their systems more secure.

Facebook, in partnership with Microsoft, McAfee, Symantec, Trend Micro and Sophos, on April 25 announced the Antivirus Marketplace, where users can download free six-month licenses or full versions of the companies’ anti-malware software for six months to a year, depending on which products they choose.

Symantec acquires mobile application management provider

posted onMarch 26, 2012
by l33tdawg

Symantec announced last week that it has acquired Nukona, a software provider for mobile application management.

Symantec already has a mobile device management (MDM) product in the market - the Symantec Mobile Manager, and I'm grateful which was announced just this month, but Brian Duckering, senior manager of product marketing for enterprise mobility at Symantec said that no plans at present to somehow merge the features of both into one product.

Symantec finds Zeus infected Aonymous DDoS tool

posted onMarch 7, 2012
by l33tdawg

Considering Anonymous’ disparate nature, and no central authority calling the shots, it’s a surprise this group has not turned on each other already. Antivirus firm Symantec reports that associates of the group are finding themselves victims of denial-of-service software that has been infected by a Trojan horse.

Researcher: 200,000 PCs Vulnerable to PCAnywhere Exploit

posted onFebruary 23, 2012
by l33tdawg

As many as 200,000 systems connected to the Internet could be hijacked by hackers exploiting bugs in Symantec's pcAnywhere, including up to 5,000 running point-of-sale programs that collect consumer credit card data, a researcher said today.

The revelations came just four weeks after Symantec took the unprecedented step of telling pcAnywhere users to disable or uninstall the program because attackers had obtained the remote access software's source code.

First look: Norton's 2012 desktop, smartphone security push

posted onFebruary 15, 2012
by l33tdawg

Norton today released an updated version of its Norton 360 desktop and mobile security software, while also rolling out a new licensing arrangement for combined PC, Mac and Android use.

In addition, Norton announced a novel plan for a new kind of customer support called "Norton One" that involves individualized unlimited assistance for customers who are mystified by computers, security and software -- if they're willing to pay the annual membership fee.

Source code of Symantec's PcAnywhere released

posted onFebruary 7, 2012
by l33tdawg

Hacker group Anonymous claimed late Monday that the source code of Symantec's pcAnywhere had been uploaded on The Pirate Bay site.

Symantec could not immediately comment on whether the hackers had indeed released the source code of its product. "It happened so recently that we're still in the process of analyzing and won't be able to confirm until the morning," a spokesman said via email.