-
1
Social engineering remains biggest cyber threat
Despite increases in the number and capability of botnets for distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks, social engineering remains one of the largest cyber security threats to IT infrastructure according to the Australian Federal Police (AFP).
-
Australia to join European Cybercrime Convention
The Federal Government has announced its intention to sign the Council of Europe Convention on Cybercrime.
-
1
Australian mining company hacks the tip of the iceberg
Despite the recent spotlight on the security risks to local mining companies operating in China, the greatest threat to Australian organisations is corporate espionage, rather than state-sponsored hacking, a security expert has warned.
-
Biometric visas enlisted to help fight terrorism
The Federal Government has tipped $69 million into a new biometric visa system which will screen visitors entering Australia from a secret list of 10 countries.
-
Federal Government builds secret database to fight cyber-terrorism
Australia's biggest banks, telcos, and utilities have handed sensitive data to government for the protection of critical infrastructure (CI) against terrorism and natural disasters.
Advanced Persistent Threats and Real-Time Threat Management
Businesses face a constantly evolving threat landscape. One of the greatest challenges is presented by advanced persistent threats (APTs), which are sophisticated, multi‐faceted attacks targeting a particular organisation. Mitigating the risk of APTs requires advances beyond traditional layered security to include real‐time threat management. This whitepaper describes the nature of APTs, the risks they pose to businesses, and techniques for blocking, detecting, and containing APTs and other emerging threats. Read now.
DriverScanner 2010
DriverScanner scans your computer and provides you with a list of drivers that need to be updated. All you have to do, then, is simply ...
Best Practices to Make BYOD Simple and Secure
As consumerisation continues to transform IT, organisations are moving quickly to design strategies to allow bring-your-own devices (BYOD). This paper provides IT executives with guidance to develop a complete BYOD strategy which gives people optimal freedom of choice while helping IT adapt to consumerisation - at the same time addressing requirements for security, simplicity and cost reduction. Read now.
- FTJob Title: Mac Systems/ Enterprise Systems EngineerNZ
- FTPeoplesoft CRM DeveloperWA
- FTPeoplesoft CRM DeveloperWA
- FTTechnical Business AnalystNSW
- FTWeb Analyst - WebTrendsVIC
- FTFlash / ActionScript Developer - ContractNSW
- FTApplication Support ConsultantNSW
- FTJunior Financial System Support ConsultantNSW
- FTFlash / ActionScript Developer - ContractNSW
- FTInvestment System Support ConsultantNSW
- ADMA criticises government plans for compulsory data breach notification
- The innovative and social CMO: CommBank's Andy Lark
- 5 social media deals that make Waze and Tumblr seem like steals
- Omnicom Media Group to deploy Salesforce Marketing Cloud worldwide
- Social data tool reveals value of an individual Tweet








