Security news you can use – The updates keep rolling!
December 30, 2009 by admin

Keeping your system secure is a never ending battle. The evil-doers on the net are getting ever more sophisticated, and coming up with new ways to fool, cajole, trick or force you into downloading, running or loading software on your system that will compromise your system – at best, rendering it unusable, or at worst, invading your privacy, or even draining your bank account. It’s a Wild West frontier out there in the interwebs!

With that, let’s take a look at some of the recent updates and developments ion security news:

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Flash! Another patchy Tuesday has come and gone
December 9, 2009 by admin

Yesterday was the second Tuesday of the month, and by now you should know just what that means… another set of security updates for Microsoft products. This week also sees us with some other notable updates to some Adobe products, and you’ll want to take note of these as well.

Remember that security updates are a fact of life these days. It isn’t an indication that the software manufacturers are creating shoddy product; rather, it is a sign that they are discovering flaws and repairing them in an effort to stay ahead of the malicious communities out there in the wild and untamed internet world. Security is an ongoing process these days.

We’ll start with Adobe this time.

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Security Wednesday – Keeping you up to date
October 21, 2009 by admin

I’ve missed a few weeks with my recent travel, and boy do we have a lot to talk about with security updates this week! In fact, there is so much, I’m going to have to give it to you in condensed form, and provide the links for further reading if you’re interested. We’ve had a big Windows patch Tuesday for October (the biggest ever!), some Apple updates and some Adobe updates. Remember, keeping up to date, currently patched software is a major step in keeping your system secure and protected against malware and worse.

Let’s start with the Microsoft Windows updates.

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Adobe InDesign and InCopy get a refresh to 6.0.4
September 23, 2009 by admin

Adobe Systems Incorporated today rolled out updates to their publishing flagship product, InDesign CS4, and its partner program InCopy.

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Adobe Releases Photoshop Elements 8 and Premier Elements 8
by admin

Adobe Systems Incorporated today announced the release of Photoshop Elements 8 and Premiere Elements 8, along with bundles and their "Plus" versions.

New features in Photoshop Elements 8 include:

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Browsing safely, browser updates, and a brief look forward – security news
by admin

Safe Browsing – Tip of the Week

This week’s tip comes courtesy of the Security Now! podcast, a great weekly treatise on all things secure. This is a really cool tip, thanks to Steve Gibson for producing a very informative podcast!

There is a “diagnostic page” on Google, that consolidates malware reporting of a given domain or site based on Google’s crawling of the website. It will give a report on the website, indicating whether Google’s web crawling bots have detected malware in the site or any of its links. The diagnostic page is accessible using the following URL text:

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The Cookie is Dead, Long Live the Cookie!
September 2, 2009 by admin

Overview

A recent study at UC Berkeley, a government inquiry, and several recent news articles have combined to highlight a new privacy concern, as well as some underhanded tricks that web tracking companies are using to monitor internet user activity. Using Adobe’s Flash Player, web sites now have the ability to track users using a concept similar to browser cookies – and up to now, this has been done silently, without notification, and in some cases even after individual users have “opted out” of cookie tracking.

In fact, the study showed that more than 50% of the top 100 internet sites used Flash data to “re-spawn” cookies that had been intentionally cleared, deleted, or blocked by users.

Here’s an experiment you can try. Take a look at the following folder in your system, to see what sites are using Flash data to maintain tracking information on your system:

In Windows XP:

C:\Documents and Settings\{yourname}\Application Data\Macromedia\Flash Player\#SharedObjects

In Windows Vista:

C:\Users\{yourname}\AppData\Roaming\Macromedia\Flash Player\#SharedObjects

In Mac OS/X:

~/Library/Preferences/Macromedia/Flash Player/#SharedObjects/

In either case, look in the subfolder with a random name, and you’ll be amazed at what you find.

The idea of using Flash Player to store tracking information isn’t new, but it has spawned a hidden system for tracking user activity in a way that is neither self-evident, nor easily managed. Read on for some background and suggestions in how to deal with this situation.

If you want to skip the gory details and just know how to prevent this, skip to the section near the end, titled “Adobe’s Flash Player Settings Application.”

Read on…

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Adobe Customer Service – On the mend? Time will tell.
August 31, 2009 by admin

Adobe has officially done it.

It is a big step for a large public company to take, to admit that things are wrong. To apologize and to explain the steps being taken to correct a problem that has gotten out of control.

Such is the case with Adobe’s customer service. While customers have complained with increasing frequency in industry forums, and even Adobe’s own user communities and blogs, little has been done, or so it seemed.

Until now.

Lambert Walsh, Adobe’s Vice President of Technical Services, has issued an open letter to Adobe Customers (link opens as a pdf). In his letter, Mr. Walsh attempts reparations for the decline in the quality of customer service, explains some of the reasons for the slip-ups, and offers hope that the root cause of the problems is being addressed, while offering some additional contacts for help should any customer feel they are not being cared for as expected.

Additionally, John Nack, Adobe’s Principal Product Manager for Photoshop, has posted a blog entry on the subject, and that entry is seeing some lively conversation in the comments. John is to be commended for being very visible on the front lines and for taking quite a few shots from disgruntled customers via his blog comments.

Will Adobe get their service back on track? Only time will tell. Making a visible public statement and admitting the problem is certainly a positive first step. Follow through and eventual improvement will be a tougher, longer term challenge for the company.

In the meanwhile, Adobe’s executives can take a lesson from Mr. Nack – every Adobe person in sales, marketing, product development, and quality assurance should be required to spend a fixed time – say, 1-2 hours each week – supplementing the technical support telephone lines and talking with customers. Let them use the phone systems, the troubleshooting databases, and all the call management systems used by the customer services representatives we’ve loved to hate. I daresay the experience would be eye-opening!

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