Health

Take care of your health

Nature of life

It goes on.

Future

welcome to the future

Present

Future just ahed

Feel

Save Nature

Showing posts with label indian hackers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indian hackers. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 January 2017

Microsoft Hardens Latest Windows Version Against Hackers

Microsoft has fortified the latest version of Windows to make it more secure than previous editions, but the strongest protections will be available only to those willing to pay a steep price for them.

Windows 10 Anniversary Update has introduced many mitigation techniques in core Windows components and the Microsoft Edge browser, helping protect customers from entire classes of exploits for very recent and even undisclosed vulnerabilities, Matt Oh and Elia Florio of Microsoft's Windows Defender ATP Research Team wrote in an online post last week.

Countering unidentified vulnerabilities -- also known as "zero day" vulnerabilities -- is particularly important because they are a powerful tool used to penetrate systems and steal data by attackers, especially those working for nation-states.

Rather than focus on a single vulnerability, Microsoft is focusing on mitigation techniques that counter classes of exploits, Oh and Florio explained.

"As a result, these mitigation techniques are significantly reducing attack surfaces that would have been available to future Zero-Day exploits," 
Paying for Protection

For the most effective post-breach protection, customers should sign up for Windows Defender ATP, Oh and Florio suggested, a service that is available only to users of Windows Enterprise E5.

That appears to be a departure from how Windows security was treated in the past, observed Michael Cherry, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft.

When Microsoft launched its Trustworthy Computing initiative in 2002, there was a commitment to making all versions of Windows equally secure, he recalled.

"Now, what Microsoft is saying in a subtle way," Cherry told Tech News World, is that "to be the most secure on Windows, you should be using Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection -- but we're saving that for our best customers, our customers willing to pay for the enterprise edition. That's a big change that's happening in Windows security."

What Users Get

Nevertheless, the security improvements in the new Windows 10 Anniversary Update are worthwhile for consumers.

"This is great news for users," said Jerome Segura, a senior security researcher for Malware bytes.

"Microsoft is addressing zero days and exploits in general by sand boxing a lot of the components in the operating system," he told Tech News World.

Sand boxing is a technique used to isolate activity in a space where it can be observed without affecting its surroundings. If it behaves badly in the sandbox, then it won't be allowed to play with the other parts of a system.

Sandbox techniques were used in Windows 10 to neutralize an exploit that used corrupt fonts to gain escalated privileges on a system, Microsoft's Oh and Florio explained. Escalated privileges allow an intruder greater freedom to roam and access data on a network.

Room for Improvement

While Microsoft is making good progress in hardening the Windows kernel, it could improve the operating system's security in other areas, too. One of those areas is third-party applications and components.

"While it's trying to ensure that its operating system is secure, it still depends on Flash, Java and other pieces of software. At the end of the day, the security of the system is going to depend on all the pieces, not just what Microsoft ships," Malware bytes' Segura observed.

"You can have an OS that's safe, but if you have an outdated Flash plug-in, you can still get infected," he pointed out.

Hackers also are exploiting Microsoft Office documents.

"Microsoft needs to tighten up legacy code like macros -- either disable it or sandbox it," Segura said.

Threat to Security Vendors?

As Windows security improves, will it threaten the security ecosystem that has grown up around the OS?

"Ultimately, Microsoft's new anti-exploit features in Windows calls into question the value of legacy antivirus protections," said Simon Crosby, CTO of Bromium.

"However, it is important to note that relatively few enterprises use Windows 10 yet, so any Microsoft mitigation in Windows 10 that fails to address the legacy Windows installed base cannot address threats targeting [the security ecosystem]," he told Tech News World.

Windows users still need to use antivirus programs, added Jack E. Gold, founder and principal analyst with J.Gold Associates. "Microsoft is pushing its antivirus program," he told Tech News World, "so it's not saying you don't need antivirus anymore."


Saturday, 5 December 2015

Indian hackers bring down Pak websites on Independence day


A group of anonymous Indian hackers, called 'Hell Shield Hackers', claimed on Saturday to have taken down around 100 Pakistani business websites as a "tribute to Indian jawans" on the occasion of Independence Day.
Injector Devil, one of the hackers, told Hindustan Times, "We belong to Hell Shield Hackers, currently most active ‘black hat’ team in India. We have more than 1000 defaces registered on our team name. Our founder is L@z@rus and other members are psychotic_overloadD, indi-g3@r, Mr.404, poison operator are stated there in the deface page."
The term black hat refers to the hacking of a website with malicious intent, while white hat refers to ethical hacking. In the hacking terminology, defacing means taking down a website.
The hackers posted a message in all the websites asking Pakistani citizens to "be prepared for a full day of website attacks".
According to Injector Devil, Pakistan hackers had hacked many Indian sites on Friday (to mark Pakistan’s Independence Day on August 14) and this was payback.
"We want to pass the message that Pakistan hackers should not attack Indian cyber space without any reason. If they do it, we are ready to defend it. Cyber space needs peace but they keep on violating it. But Pakistan hackers were in full blown war on August 14. So it's a little payback from our side as we always do."
Some of the prominent sites that were defaced are:
nationalclubpk.com/rooms
http://www.skillscollege.com.pk/Vijay.html
http://www.paspk.org/root.html
http://www.online-akhbar.com
http://cityelectronics.pk/web/
The entire list of 'hacked' websites was published in Pastebin, a cloud space for storing text information.
http://pastebin.com/wiatQW5P
While some of the hacked websites have recovered, the others remain defaced.