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83 Stories on Viruses and Worms
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Fighting the agents of organized cybercrime

Back in the good old days of the Internet, the hacker was a teenager motivated by high-tech pranks and bragging rights. Today, the online thief could be anyone with 'Net access after a quick buck.

Time.com: Hackers Recruit for Local Language Skill

Wanted: computer virus writers. Must be fluent in Mandarin. Or Russian. Or Portuguese

BA pilots to vote on strike action

British Airways pilots will be balloted Wednesday over possible strike action in a dispute over the airline's plans to set up a subsidiary for services between continental Europe and the U.S.

Cyberthieves go phishing to rob banks

Notorious 20th-century bank robber Willie Sutton said famously, "I rob banks because that's where the money is."

FSB: Screen Your Server

FRANK LOBASCIO IS ON THE FRONT LINE OF THE battle for safe computing. The president of American Carriers Moving & Storage of Moorestown, N.J., Lobascio used to spend at least $20,000 a year to protect the systems that generate customer estimates, schedule trucks and drivers, send invoices, and process payroll for his $3-million-a-year company. Still, viruses, spyware, and spam kept creeping onto the network killing hard drives, destroying data, and knocking servers offline. To make matters worse, a handful of staffers were secretly visiting porn and gambling sites on company time. With no room in his budget for a full-time IT person, Lobascio tried to make do by calling in a part-time consultant. "You name the antispyware and antivirus package, and I bought it," he says.

Review: Great antispyware protection from CounterSpy 2.0

In its first appearance, CounterSpy was the only antispyware product that correctly identified every piece of spyware in our current active-detection test. It did very well in active scanning, on-demand detection, and complete spyware removal. We also like its overall look and feel.

Teen questioned in computer hacking probe

A New Zealand teenager has been questioned in connection with a scheme by hackers to remotely take over more than 1 million computers worldwide and use them for criminal activity, New Zealand police and the FBI said Thursday.

Companies brace for mobile maliciousness

Most computer users live with the knowledge of online scammers and malicious code. But what about cell phone users? Handsets, after all, are getting more advanced all the time. As the tagline for Nokia's N95 smart phone suggests: "It's what computers have become."

Time.com: Behind the Alicia Keys MySpace Scam

Hackers infiltrated the diva's MySpace page last week, showing that online scammers like social networking too

CNNMoney: Cyber threats get personal

There's an old saying in the news business that says if your mother tells you she loves you, check it out.

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