The 10 Most Popular Security Articles for 2008
The 10 Most Popular Security Articles for 2008
By SearchSecurityAsia editors | Jan 6, 2009
You are what you read!
We culled the entire database of SearchSecurityAsia piecing together a list of the 10 most read articles in 2008. The list doesn't surprise us. Readers are looking for help to understand how technology and best practices can help them solve their problems. Read on!
- Top Nine Security Predictions in 2009
- The challenge of staying secure during the holiday season - Cyber-criminals enjoy the festive season too

- Do BlackBerrys and other mobile devices put sensitive data at risk when used overseas?

- Security Trends 2008 review and 2009 forecast

- Top five lessons on security management for business executives

- Network simplicity key to solving security, efficiency issues

- One Sinowal Trojan + One Gang = hundreds of thousands of compromised accounts

- Cloud compliance: How to manage SaaS risk

- Study: Lack of enterprise-wide email and e-discovery control

- Surviving the Unexpected: Understanding & responding to crisis

Bonus Track: The Number One white paper download for 2008:
SearchSecurityAsia eGuide to Email Security
Bonus Track: The Number One End User Case Study of 2008:
Single Sign-on increases productivity for 1,400 users at Australian Unity
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Trusted Mobility Index
The mobile ecosystem of devices, services and networks is at a critical inflection point.While the mobile revolution is unleashing massive opportunities in both emerging and mature economies, it is also increasing in complexity and confusion. The reality is the lightning-fast adoption of powerful, smart devices is outpacing society’s ability to secure them. Today, trust in mobility hangs in the balance.
The state of the Internet, Q4, 2011
Geography appears to play a role in frequency of observed attacks on specific ports. For example, Port 23 (Telnet) is a favorite target for attacks observed to be originating from South Korea and Turkey, where it accounted for more than five times the number of attacks targeting the next most popular port (445 in both countries). Other instances of geography-based port targeting include observed attacks centered on Port 1433 (Microsoft SQL Server) in China and on Port 80 (WWW/HTTP) in Indonesia.
HID Global deploys a centralized, web-based IP access control solution at Fuxi Power Plant
Unable to meet the needs for real-time monitoring with its traditional patrol system, China's Fuxi Power Plant has deployed HID Global's VertX V2000.
StubHub: How to spot fraud before it happens
Whenever a list of log-on credentials is dumped onto the Web, retailers get hit with waves of automated attacks. Here's how ticket marketplace StubHub fights the threat.


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