Tag Archives: Sites

Syrian Electronic Army Hits Financial Times Sites, Feeds

puddingebola writes with an excerpt from the New York Times: “The Web site and several Twitter accounts belonging to The Financial Times were hacked on Friday by the Syrian Electronic Army in a continuing campaign that has aimed at an array of media outlets ranging from The Associated Press to the parody site The Onion, according to a claim by the so-called army. The Syrian Electronic Army said it seized control of several F.T. Twitter accounts and amended a number of the site’s blog posts with the headline ‘Hacked by Syrian Electronic Army.’ Hackers used their access to the F.T.’s Twitter feed to post messages, including one that said, ‘Syrian Electronic Army Was Here,’ and another that linked to a YouTube video of an execution. Both messages were quickly removed.’”

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Slashdot

Cyber Security Startup Lucent Sky’s CLEAR Makes Securing Web Sites A Breeze

Lucent-SkyOne of the most nervewracking and tedious parts of developing a Web site is making sure that it is safe from data theft and other security breaches. Taipei-based startup Lucent Sky‘s mission is to make cyber security easier for developers. The company says its software CLEAR is the first commercially available program for automatic application vulnerability mitigation.
TechCrunch

Google Launches Content Recommendation Engine For Mobile Sites, Powered By Google+

google_plus_developer_logoGoogle continues to increase the reach of its Google+ platform, and today the company is launching a new mobile content recommendation service powered by Google+. These recommendations will appear as small widgets at that bottom of the screen as users browse a news site that has enabled this service. Google’s launch partner for this service is Forbes, but others can implement these recommendations by just adding a single line of code to their mobile sites. Recommendations, Google says, can appear regardless of whether a users are signed in to Google+.
TechCrunch

With Over 15M Sites Built, Weebly Launches New Planner And Mobile Editor, Brings Website Creation Service To Android

1zI1XyZYtMmNXkvJmpoUm2eD4asrTf5z3lArZBjiox8In this day and age, if you own a small business, you need a web (and mobile) presence. It’s just the way it is. Some might opt just to go for a social media approach, a Twitter account and a Facebook page, but the likelihood is that you want something a little more flexible, high-quality and something that gives you more control over the user experience. More and more, people are turning to Wix and Weebly. The two big “W’s” in the website creator world. For those unfamiliar, Weebly is a service that lets you, your mom, grandmother, four-year-old cousin and anyone you know create a quality website for free. Launched out of Y Combinator in 2007, Weebly has had over 15 million sites created using its service to date, which collectively attract more than 100 million unique visitors each month. This week, Weebly has kicked its service up a notch with an all-new overhaul to its website builder — one that’s been a year in the making — and the launch of an interactive “Site Planner.” This new site planner is designed to help give people ideas and a little lightbulb-style inspiration that will help them walk through the creative process and vision for the site. Plus, Weebly now offers an HTML5 site creator that offers new themes and pre-fab building blocks to customize their new site, and, most importantly, a new mobile new editor that helps them optimize their site for mobile devices, along with a now-globally available Android app. In the lead-up to the big launch, co-founder David Rusenko tells us, Weebly surveyed several million consumers and found that about 56 percent of them, understandably, don’t trust a business that doesn’t have a website. And, yet, 58 percent of businesses don’t have a website. Pretty eye-opening in today’s world, when over a billion people are on Facebook and hundreds of millions have so much computing power in their pockets. Ask the Weebly founders who their core audience is and they’ll tell you, proudly, that it’s entrepreneurs — people who are trying to build their own small businesses, across every industry, not just techies. And, regardless of technical proficiency, the problem that most small business owners struggle with is how daunting it can be to face that blinking cursor, the blank page. It’s the same issue we scribblers deal with in cases of “writer’s block.” When building websites,
TechCrunch

WordPress sites targeted by mass brute-force botnet attacks

Many wordpress sites are under attack by a botnet using brute-force methods to obtain their passwords. The attacks seem limited to only users who kept the default “Admin” username for their websites, however, these attacks are only the beginning. Analysts and companies fear that the attackers are attempting to build a massive botnet that is

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SlashGear

‘Anonymous’ hackers launch cyberattack on Israeli sites

Israel’s media is reporting that the country’s websites are under cyberattack, but most targeted sites do not appear to have been affected.


FOX News

Project stores 3D images of world historic sites in limestone mine

The nonprofit organization CyArk creates 3D digital images of the world’s historic sites, but stores them on disk drives dropped each week into a bank security box. As the data is expected to grow to two petabytes over the next five years, the group chose a new archival strategy that includes stashing tape drives in a limestone mine storage facility owned by Iron Mountain.
Computerworld News

States compete to become FAA drone test sites

It’s the land where Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier, where the space shuttle fleet rolled off the assembly line and where the first private manned rocketship climbed to space.


FOX News

Dirty bomb material secured at site in Philadelphia, thousands of sites remain in U.S.

The National Nuclear Security Administration and Temple University recently announced that they had secured a device containing cesium 137 that could be used to build a radiological dirty bomb.


FOX News

Google Street View reveals Bulgarian imagery, expands Russian and UK sites

Google street view hits Europe with big expansion

Though Bulgaria mightn’t be your first choice for a relaxing holiday, fresh imagery from Google may change your tune — or at least give you a chance to experience it vicariously. Mountain View just added that nation for the first time to its Street View rolls, bringing major cities like Sofia and Varna along with attractions like the Black Sea coastline, the Architectural Museum Reserve Tsarevets and the Borovets ski resort, to name a few. In addition, Google added over 200 new Russian locales like 2014 Winter Olympics site Sochi and the Golden Abode of Buddha Shakyamun in the Republic of Kalmykia. Lastly, virtual travelers will get to enjoy new photos from the Scottish coastline, East Anglia and parts of South Wales along with refreshed imagery from major cities like Manchester, Glasgow and London. For more, grab a spot of Earl Grey (or Russian) tea and hit the source.

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Source: Google Lat Long Blog

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UK Court Orders Block of Three Torrent Sites

angry tapir writes “A court in the U.K. has ordered key Internet service providers in the country to block three torrent sites on a complaint from music labels including EMI Records and Sony Music. The High Court of Justice, Chancery Division, ordered six ISPs including Virgin Media, British Telecommunications and British Sky Broadcasting to block H33t, Kickass Torrents and Fenopy.”

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Slashdot

High Court Orders UK ISPs To Block More Torrent Sites

An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from TorrentFreak: “The website blocking phenomenon has continued today in the UK, with the High Court adding three major torrent sites to the country’s unofficial ban list. Following complaints from the music industry led by the BPI, the Court ordered the UK’s leading Internet service providers to begin censoring subscriber access to Kickass Torrents, H33T and Fenopy.” Unlike when the Pirate Bay was blocked, none of the ISPs contested this. They did, however, refuse to block things without a court order. Looks like the flood gates have been opened. On the topic of filesharing, Japan arrested 27 file sharers, using the recent changes to their copyright law that allow criminal charges to be brought against file sharers.

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Posterous Will Shut Down On April 30th, Co-Founder Garry Tan Launches Posthaven To Save Your Sites

3739276191_6fbc525b75It was just a matter of time before Twitter shut the blogging platform Posterous down, after acquiring the company last March. The team had already been folded into the flock, but this means that nobody has to worry about pesky service interruptions of keeping the service’s diminishing number of users happy. The site will be shutting down on April 30th, but it’s not a completely sad story. Have no fear, Posterous co-founder Garry Tan is coming to the rescue with a new site called Posthaven, which he promises will never shut down. Here’s what Tan had to say about the launch when we spoke to him: I’m teaming up with another cofounder of Posterous, Brett Gibson, and we are taking a pledge to keeping the URLs online forever. It’s $ 5 a month and will have all of the ease of use and power of Posterous. It’s just the two of us and we’re coding it in our bedrooms right now. Tan tells us that Posthaven will never accept funding and will be available to its users “forever.” Here’s what the Posterous/Twitter team had to say about the shutdown, along with instructions on how to get your data: Posterous launched in 2008. Our mission was to make it easier to share photos and connect with your social networks. Since joining Twitter almost one year ago, we’ve been able to continue that journey, building features to help you discover and share what’s happening in the world – on an even larger scale. On April 30th, we will turn off posterous.com and our mobile apps in order to focus 100% of our efforts on Twitter. This means that as of April 30, Posterous Spaces will no longer be available either to view or to edit. Right now and over the next couple months until April 30th, you can download all of your Posterous Spaces including your photos, videos, and documents. As Twitter delves into how to make discovery easier for its users, some of the findings learned by Posterous will most definitely come into play. On the other hand, it’s nice to know that there’s an easy way to move your information, with one of Posterous’ co-founders providing the service “from the heart.” Posthaven is currently taking reservations for its service, so grab your name. UPDATE: It looks like Posthaven is having difficulties managing all of the attention: [Photo credit: Flickr]
TechCrunch

Iran building software to control networking sites

Iran’s police chief says the Islamic Republic is developing new software to control social networking sites.


FOX News

Library Web sites see boost in mobile traffic

Tech companies aren’t the only ones that should invest in mobile. Study finds mobile users accessed library Web sites twice as much this year compared with 2009. [Read more]


CNET News

Retail sites see 27 percent traffic jump on Christmas Day

Visits to the top 500 online retail sites are up compared with the same period last year, and Amazon seems to be taking the cake. [Read more]


CNET News

Iran Claims New Cyberattacks On Industrial Sites

wiredmikey writes “Iranian officials on Tuesday said a ‘Stuxnet-like’ cyberattack hit some industrial units in a southern province. ‘A virus had penetrated some manufacturing industries in Hormuzgan province, but its progress was halted,’ Ali Akbar Akhavan said, quoted by the ISNA news agency. Akhavan said the malware was ‘Stuxnet-like’ but did not elaborate, and that the attack had occurred over the ‘past few months.’ One of the targets of the latest attack was the Bandar Abbas Tavanir Co, which oversees electricity production and distribution in Hormuzgan and adjacent provinces. He also accused ‘enemies’ of constantly seeking to disrupt operations at Iran’s industrial units through cyberattacks, without specifying how much damage had been caused. Iran has blamed the U.S. and Israel for cyberattacks in the past. In April, it said a voracious malware attack had hit computers running key parts of its oil sector and succeeded in wiping data off official servers.”

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Slashdot

Anonymous declares war on Syrian government Web sites

Online hacktivist group blames Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for the Internet blackout blanketing the country and vows retaliation. [Read more]


CNET News

Ancient rock carvings stolen from sacred US sites

Rock carvings that graced a sacred American Indian site in California’s mountains for thousands of years have fallen prey to modern thieves armed with power saws.




FOX News

Israel government Web sites hit by hacker blitz

Government says its Web sites have experienced 44 million hacking attempts but only one successful breach. [Read more]


CNET News

Anonymous targets Israeli Web sites in protest over Gaza

The hacking collective knocks the Bank of Jerusalem offline and attacks the site of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Anonymous claims nearly 700 sites have been affected. [Read more]


CNET News

Antipiracy group wins damages against torrent site’s host

In pursuit of SumoTorrent, the Dutch group wins ruling that the torrent site’s former hosting provider is responsible for damages suffered by copyright holders as a result of the site’s activities. [Read more]


CNET News

Google’s Mod_Pagespeed Is Now Out Of Beta And Ready To Make Your Sites Faster

pagespeed-logoGoogle just released the first stable version of mod_pagespeed, the company’s open-source Apache module that can automatically optimize your web pages to improve download and rendering speeds. With this release, Google is declaring this tool ready for broader adoption, though it’s worth noting that a number of large hosting providers like DreamHost, Go Daddy and content delivery network EdgeCast have already been using it in production for quite a while now.
TechCrunch

Box adds links to third-party web apps, sites

Box announced on Tuesday an HTML5 framework that makes it possible for customers and other vendors to fully integrate features of its file sharing and cloud storage software into websites and enterprise applications.
Computerworld News

Automated DMCA Takedown Notices Request Censorship of Legitimate Sites



Techmeology writes “Microsoft has sent automated DMCA notices to Google demanding the removal of several legitimate URLs from its search results that Microsoft claims were facilitating the distribution of illegal copies of Windows 8, including links to BBC news articles, Wikipedia pages, U.S. government websites, and even Bing! The erroneous DMCA notices are being sent automatically by rights holders, who are increasingly using such techniques.”

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Slashdot

Facebook’s New Timeline Event Lets You Share You’re Registered To Vote, Links To Registration Sites

Facebook Registered To VoteIf you see your friends are registered to vote, you might register too be more likely to actually cast your ballot. So in hopes of making us better citizens, Facebook now lets you declare you’re “registered to vote” through a new Timeline event.

U.S. residents can use the personalized shortcut link in Facebook’s announcement of the feature, or find “Registered To Vote” in the ‘Travel & Experiences’ category of the Life Events tab on their Timeline’s post composer. You can add where and when you registered plus fill in an optional box of details like what party you support to rally your network to cast their vote.

TechCrunch

Why You And Your Favorite Web Sites Will Feel The Pain If “Do Not Track” Passes

EricWheelerEditor’s note: Eric Wheeler is CEO and co-founder of 33Across. He brings 20 years of experience leading successful Internet businesses to 33Across.

Much has already been discussed in the media regarding the threat that the $ 300 billion advertising industry faces if Congress passes a strict interpretation of Do Not Track. Most of the discussion has focused on how “adtech” companies would get hurt: ad networks, third-party data providers, DSPs, and marketers. However, what has gotten far less attention is that many of the web publishers that consumers enjoy on a daily basis would also have their businesses severely squeezed if such legislation were enacted.
TechCrunch

Hiccups hit some iPhone 5 pre-order sites

Early buyers of Apple’s latest iPhone once again slammed servers and brought down stores, though some handled the demand with aplomb.
[Read more]
CNET News

Look-Alike Web Sites Hoodwink Republican Donors



Hugh Pickens writes writes “Shane Goldmacher writes that a network of look-alike campaign websites have netted hundreds of thousands of dollars this year in what some are calling a sophisticated political phishing scheme. The doppelgänger websites have the trappings of official campaign pages: smiling candidate photos and videos, issue pages, and a large red “donate” button at the top and exist for nearly three-dozen prominent GOP figures, including presidential nominee Mitt Romney, House Speaker John Boehner, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, and donation magnets such as Reps. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota and Allen West of Florida. The only difference is that proceeds from the shadow sites go not to the candidates pictured, but to an obscure conservative group called CAPE PAC run by activist Jeff Loyd, a former chairman of the Gila County GOP in Arizona. ‘The only thing they are doing is lining their pockets and funding their own operation,’ says Republican political strategist Chris LaCivita. CAPE PAC has a strong Web presence, with over 100,000 followers on Twitter and 50,000 on Facebook and its business model is to buy Google ads — about $ 290,000 worth, as of the end of June — to promote its network of candidate sites whenever people search for prominent GOP officials. A search for ‘Mitt Romney,’ for instance, often leads to two sponsored results: Romney’s official site and CAPE PAC’s mittromneyin2012.com. Once on a CAPE PAC site, users would have to notice fine print at either the top or bottom of the page revealing that they were not on the official page of their favored politician. A dozen donors, including some experienced Washington hands such as Neusner, had no idea they had contributed to the group before National Journal Daily contacted them. ‘It confused me, and I do this for a living,’ says Washington lobbyist Patrick Raffaniello. ‘That’s pretty sophisticated phishing.’”

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Slashdot

Hackers hit Swedish Web sites in support of Assange

An unidentified group of hackers wages several denial-of-service attacks on Swedish government Web sites in a show of solidarity with the WikiLeaks founder.
[Read more]
CNET News

German Government Wants Google To Pay For the Right To Link To News Sites



First time accepted submitter presroi writes “Al Jazeera is reporting on the current state of plans by the German government to amend the national copyright law. The so-called ‘Leistungsschutzrecht’ (neighboring right) for publishers is introducing the right for press publishers to demand financial compensation if a company such as Google wants to link to their web site. Since the New York Times reported on this issue in March this year, two draft bills have been released by the Minister of Justice and have triggered strong criticism from the entire political spectrum in Germany, companies and activist bloggers.(Full disclosure: I am being quoted by Al Jazeera in this article)”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Google targets accused pirate sites

Sites that generate too many copyright takedown notices will be moved lower in Google’s search rankings.
[Read more]
CNET News

WordPress Launches Retina Support For Gravatar And All Hosted And Self-Hosted WP Sites

wordpress-logoWordPress’ Matt Mullenweg just announced that the WordPress.com interface and all the blogs hosted on the site are now optimized for high-density displays like the ones found on Apple’s new iPad and Retina MacBook Pro. Through JetPack 1.6, which also launched today, users with self-hosted WordPress sites can also enable the same functionality.

The arrival of these high dots-per-inch (HiDPI) devices took many developers by surprise and while many Mac apps, for example, have already been optimized for Retina displays, most developers are still playing catch-up. Things are even worse on the Web. As Mullenweg notes, most web sites “don’t have high-resolution equivalents of all their graphics to take advantage of the new screen, so they get “doubled” and look fuzzy, they stand out like a sore thumb.”
TechCrunch

US political convention sites brace for flood of mobile traffic

Weeks before the U.S. Republican and Democratic national conventions that will anoint each party's nominee for president, special equipment to boost cellular signals in each party's venues is already nearly installed.
Computerworld News

China tightens regulations on videos produced by Internet sites

Chinese regulators are cracking down on inappropriate video and films made by the nation's Internet firms with new measures meant to encourage the production of more positive programs.
Computerworld News

Amazon Cloud Hit By Storm, Knocking Out Sites Like Netflix, Instagram

Digital cloud services aren't immune to the impact of real clouds, and that meant some bad news this weekend for the folks at Amazon and sites that rely in its web services.
Computerworld News

LoveYourLarder Serves Up Revenue Share To Food Bloggers And Recipe Sites

128208v6-max-150x150LoveYourLarder, which wants to be the UK “Etsy for foodies”, has launched a revenue share scheme for publishers so that they can earn money by linking to relevant products, thus supporting the smaller independent food producers that the company works with.

Soft-launched in late 2010, LoveYourLarder can perhaps be best thought of as an online version of a farmer’s market, enabling foodies to discover and buy hard-to-find ingredients or “artisan” food and drink from independent producers in the UK.

Hence the reference to Etsy.

TechCrunch

Iran claims it defused cyberattack on nuclear sites

An Iranian news agency says the country’s experts have defused a “massive” cyberattack on Iran’s nuclear facilities.




FOXNews.com

India Unblocks File-Sharing Sites



An anonymous reader writes with an update to news from last month that many popular file-sharing sites, including the Pirate Bay, had been blocked in India. Now, India’s Madras High Court has amended its earlier decision. “The court order wasn’t targeted at a specific site or ISP and gave the copyright holder carte blanche to demand broad blockades. The ISPs were seen as the bad guys by subscribers and ‘Anonymous’ groups, but had no other option than to comply.” Instead of forcing ISPs to block an entire site in order to prevent the sharing of a single file, now only particular URLs must be blocked. “The new order was issued following an appeal filed by a consortium of ISPs.”

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Slashdot

On Ubokia, Buyers Post What They’re Looking For — And Now It’s Embeddable On Partner Sites

ubokia-logo-smallLooking for a cool new bike? Or a dress of a specific color and style? Instead of making you search for it, a startup called Ubokia lets you post what you’re looking for, then wait for the sellers to come to you.

The site has been making progress recently, crossing the 100,000 user mark (the company says via email that it’s now “well on our way to 200K users and over 400K unique visitors”), and it just launched a new feature that could take those numbers up further, by making Ubokia embeddable on partner sites.
TechCrunch

US Labor Board: It’s OK To Discuss Work and Pay with Coworkers On Social Sites



itwbennett writes “Your employer won’t like it, but they can’t stop you from discussing working conditions and compensation with your coworkers on social media. In his most recent social media memo, National Labor Relations Board General Counsel Lafe Solomon said that in 6 of the 7 employers’ social media policies he reviewed, he found violations of Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act, which allows employees to join labor unions and to discuss working conditions with each other.”

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Slashdot

Many big-name sites sitting out World IPv6 Launch

The Internet's biggest players — including Facebook, Google, Yahoo and Bing — are turning on IPv6 today as part of the World IPv6 Launch Day challenge coordinated by the Internet Society. But which websites are not ready to support the next-gen Internet Protocol?
Computerworld News

Study: Yesterday’s Facebook Outage Also Slowed Down Major Media And Retail Sites

facebook_logoIt’s a testament to how important Facebook has become in the web ecosystem that the social network’s performance issues yesterday didn’t just affect the site itself but also a wide variety of other sites as well. Performance monitoring company Compuware APM, which analyses the performance of thousands of top sites, just sent us some interesting data about how Facebook’s problems yesterday correlated with significant slowdowns across major U.S. media and retail sites.
TechCrunch

Cannot access secured Web sites after OS X update

Inconsistent symptoms suggest several approaches people can try to get certificate-based Web communication working properly.
[Read more]
CNET News

Social networking sites to help veterans

As veterans make the transition out of military life, social networking has moved beyond mere communication tool to become a support system and lifeline, helping veterans address employment, housing, education and health issues.




FOXNews.com

X Prize adopts NASA guidelines for protecting lunar heritage sites, Buzz Aldrin punch averted

X Prize adopts NASA guidelines for protecting lunar heritage sites

NASA hopes that one small step by Google’s Lunar X Prize will eventually lead to a giant leap in protecting historical sites on the moon. The X Prize Foundation announced that it will adopt guidelines released by the space agency last year to help preserve lunar heritage sites. The move comes at a crucial time as a new space race increases the possibility of an imminent moon landing, according to NASA. Google’s Lunar X Prize alone currently has 26 contestants worldwide vying to land a robot on the lunar surface by 2015. NASA stressed that their recommendations aren’t law and “do not represent mandatory U.S. or international requirements.” Examples include approach and landing guidelines to minimize disturbance, contamination and degradation of Apollo mission sites. That certainly sounds more reasonable than, say, plopping some dude in a spacesuit at a lunar outpost to shoot trespassers with a plasma shotgun while yelling, “Get off my property!” In the meantime, feel free to mosey on over to the PR after the break.

Continue reading X Prize adopts NASA guidelines for protecting lunar heritage sites, Buzz Aldrin punch averted

X Prize adopts NASA guidelines for protecting lunar heritage sites, Buzz Aldrin punch averted originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 May 2012 00:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

16th annual Webby Awards highlight apps, not just sites

The 16th Annual Webby Award winners have been released, honoring websites, interactive advertising, online film & video, as well as apps.




FOXNews.com

Less than half of Facebook, Google users understand sites’ privacy policies

Most users of Facebook and Google had fundamental gaps in understanding, even after reading privacy policies, about how the websites handled their information and how other Web users could discover it, according to a study released by the digital branding firm Siegel+Gale.
Computerworld News

Live Nation’s Kick-Ass Concert Calendar Recommends You Gigs From 75 Ticket Sites, Earns You Discounts

Live Nation Concert Calendar LogoYou know what doesn’t rock? Missing a concert by your favorite band. So today Live Nation is publicly launching its Concert Calendar, a Facebook app that pulls in music and comedy gig listings from Ticketmaster (which merged with Live Nation in 2010) as well as 75 other ticketers.

The calendar offers concert recommendations based on your Facebook Likes and streaming service listening habits from Spotify and other apps, as well as the shows you’re friends are going to. You even earn Concert Cash for discounts on tickets and merchandise just for visiting.
TechCrunch

SSL Pulse Project Finds Just 10% of SSL Sites Actually Secure



Trailrunner7 writes “A new project that was setup to monitor the quality and strength of the SSL implementations on top sites across the Internet found that 75 percent of them are vulnerable to the BEAST SSL attack and that just 10 percent of the sites surveyed should be considered secure. The SSL Pulse project, set up by the Trustworthy Internet Movement, looks at several components of each site’s SSL implementation to determine how secure the site actually is. The project looks at how each site is configured, which versions of the TLS and SSL protocols the site supports, whether the site is vulnerable to the BEAST or insecure renegotiation attacks and other factors. The data that the SSL Pulse project has gathered thus far shows that the vast majority of the 200,000 sites the project is surveying need some serious help in fixing their SSL implementations.”

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