Let’s play the “Analyst Firm Dating Game.” We asked four of the top analyst firms what technologies they consider to be in the realm of application security. If we compile their answers into a table, it would look like this:
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IRS “Get Transcript” Incident Hit Over 700,000 Taxpayers
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) reported on Friday that the total number of taxpayers affected by the incident involving the agency’s Get Transcript application is much higher than previously reported.
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European Arrests Target Darknet Selling Drugs, Arms, Fake IDs
Police in seven European countries raided operators of "darknet" online platforms trading in weapons, illegal drugs, fake IDs and counterfeit money, arresting nine suspects, German authorities said Monday.
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Data Breach at UC Berkeley Impacts 80,000
Roughly 80,000 people might have been impacted by cyber attack that hit a UC Berkeley system containing Social Security and bank account numbers, the university warns.
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Apple-FBI Case Has Wide Implications
Apple and the US government are squaring off in an epic legal battle with wide-ranging implications for how technology firms must work with law enforcement.
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BlackBerry Launches Security Consulting Service
Just days before the RSA Conference in San Francisco kicked off, Canadian mobile phone maker BlackBerry announced the launch of a new Professional Cybersecurity Services practice and the acquisition of UK-based cybersecurity consulting firm Encription Limited.
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Worm Capabilities Added to FighterPOS Malware
The developers of the point-of-sale (PoS) malware known as FighterPOS have added worm capabilities to their creation, and the number of infections detected in the United States has increased over the past period.
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Google Helps News Sites Thwart DDoS Attacks
Google on Thursday announced the public launch of Project Shield, an initiative aimed at protecting news sites from distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks, for free.
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Pentagon Boosts Spending to Fight Cyber Attacks
The Pentagon plans to spend an additional $900 million in the coming year to boost cyber defense measures, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Thursday.
US officials are still reeling from last year's revelation that personal data from some 20 million federal employees, contractors and others had been hacked in a massive breach at the Office of Personnel Management.
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Mozilla Allows Symantec to Issue SHA-1 Certificates to Payment Processor
Mozilla has decided to allow Symantec to issue nine new SSL certificates signed using the SHA-1 cryptographic hash function to payment processor Worldpay after the company failed to upgrade devices in time.
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