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Thursday, September 29, 2011

MODEL ARTICULATION AGREEMENT BETWEEN 4YR CAE and 2YR CAE2Y ACADEMIC INSTITUTIONS

On September 1, 2011 Wilmington University in Delaware and Prince George’s Community College in Maryland finalized an articulation agreement that is being touted as the model articulation agreement for National Centers of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Education (CAE/IAE) universities and National Centers of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance 2-Year Education (CAE2Y) community colleges.  This articulation agreement creates a seamless transition from a community college to a four year institution and can help expedite the injection of critically needed cybersecurity professionals into a workforce that desperately needs them to protect our nation’s sensitive digital information.


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Friday, February 4, 2011

ICANN HAS RUN OUT OF NUMBERS!!!!

It is now more important than ever that we switch over IPv6 from IPv4!!!

Internet address warehouse empty

From http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110204/ts_alt_afp/usitinternetsoftwareicann

Internet address warehouse empty AFP/File – Rod Beckstrom, chief executive officer and president of Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers …
MIAMI (AFP) – The global warehouse for Internet addresses has run empty.
The non-profit Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) doled out its last five batches of "IP" numbers that identify destinations for digital traffic.
"A pool of more than four billion Internet addresses has been emptied this morning," ICANN chief Rod Beckstrom said at a Miami press conference.
"It is completely depleted. There are no more."
He brushed aside fears of modern life being devastated by an "IPocalypse," saying Regional Internet Registries (RIRs) worldwide will be doling out remaining addresses to support a shift to a bountiful new "IPv6" format.
"It is like running out of license plates," said Internet Architecture Board chairman Olaf Kolkman. "Driving on the road the next day would not change."
The touted solution to the problem is a switch to an "IPv6" format which allows trillions of Internet addresses, while the current IPv4 standard provides a meager four billion or so.
The effort and expense of changing to IPv6 would fall mostly on Internet service providers, websites and network operators that have to make sure systems can handle the new online addresses and properly route traffic.
"If an ISP (internet service provider) gets its act together, it shouldn't be a massive problem," Trefor Davies, chief operating officer of British ISP Timico, told AFP.
"We really should see this as an historic event," he continued. "The very nature of the Internet has changed with the transition."
Beckstrom expected the full switch to IPv6 to take years with potential overall costs in the billions of dollars, some of which could be factored into routine replacement of equipment.
"We are talking about billions of dollars here globally, not trillions of dollars," Beckstrom said.
Consumers, for the most part, should remain oblivious to the switch since complex IP numbers would still appear to them as words and domains, such as icann.org.
"My mother, my neighbor, my kids -- they should never notice," Kolkman said.
Some people might need to update routers or modems that connect computers to the Internet.
"All conditions are in place for a successful IPv6 transition," Beckstrom said. "The future of the Internet and the innovation it fosters lies within IPv6."
Registries could begin running out of IPv4 addresses as early as next year, according to US computer scientist Vint Cerf, who is revered as one of the "fathers of the Internet."
"Today's ICANN announcement marks a major milestone in the history of the Internet," Cerf said. "IPv6, the next chapter, is now under way."
ICANN has been calling for a change to IPv6 for years but websites and Internet service providers have been clinging to the old standard since the birth of the Internet.
With about seven billion people on the planet, the IPv4 protocol doesn't allow for everyone to have a gadget with its own online address.
The situation has been equated to not having enough telephone numbers for everyone.
The number of addresses that IPv6 allows for amounts to 340 "undecillion" (followed by 36 zeroes); enough for a trillion people to each be assigned trillions of IP numbers, according to Beckstrom.
IPv4 addresses were expected to run out first in Asia, where demand has been highest as people and businesses in emerging markets embrace online lifestyles.
Once RIRs run out of IPv4 addresses, they will turn to IPv6.
The formats have been likened to different languages, with translation needed for systems to handle both.
Computers and other gadgets that don't get the new format might have to start sharing instead of having unique identifying numbers.
"The Internet won't stop working; it will just slowly degrade," Google engineer Lorenzo Colitti said of not making the move to IPv6. "Things will get slower and flakier."
Google, Facebook and other major Internet players will add IPv6 addresses to their systems in a one-day trial run on June 8 to let all parties involved check for trouble spots.
"We need to kick the tires on it at a global scale and see if there are some unforeseen problems," Colitti said. "There is really a rallying cry element to it. No single player can do it alone; we need to work together."
World IPv6 Day will start at 0001 GMT on June 8.
Adoption of IPv6 is vital to preventing the Internet from becoming "balkanized" with localized addressing frameworks, according to Internet Society chief technology officer Leslie Daigle.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Lack of Cyber Security Causes Cyber Crime to Flourish

One more exsample of why its important to secure your computers and networks.

Yahoo news had an excelent article on just how prosperous cyber criminals have become. Cyberspace is literaly the new black market mall for organized crime familys to become billionares. People need to get educated about securing their personal data and start locking down their computers and networks. Businesses as well have to start investing in better security to keep "our" private information private!

Link for the article: http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110120/ts_alt_afp/usitcomputersecuritycrimepandalabs

Business booming for cyber criminals: security firm

Business booming for cyber criminals: security firm AFP/Illustration – Cyber criminals are selling stolen credit card details for as little as two dollars each and renting …

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Cyber criminals are selling stolen credit card details for as little as two dollars each and renting computer networks for spam for 15 dollars as part of a vast online black market, according to a report released Thursday.
PandaLabs, the anti-malware laboratory of computer security company Panda Security, published the various prices for cyber crime-related products after conducting an undercover investigation into online crime networks.
"This is a rapidly growing industry and cyber-criminals are aiding and abetting each other's efforts to steal personal information for financial profit," PandaLabs said.
"PandaLabs discovered a vast network selling stolen bank details along with other types of products in forums and more than 50 dedicated online stores."
The computer security firm said cyber criminals had diversified from stolen bank and credit card details to a "much broader range of hacked confidential information" including log-ins, passwords, fake credit cards and other data.
"Since anonymity is of the utmost importance, many sellers use underground forums to keep out of sight," PandaLabs said. "Their offices are effectively the Internet.
"Some are more brazen about their activities, and have accounts on Facebook and Twitter which they use as shop windows."
PandaLabs said a credit card number or bank account details can be purchased for two dollars but that does not include any information on the available credit line or bank balance.
"The price increases to 80 dollars for smaller bank balances and upwards of 700 dollars to access accounts with a guaranteed balance of 82,000 dollars," it said.
PandaLabs said the price for rental of a botnet, a network of infected computers, for sending spam or other purposes begins at 15 dollars.
Cyber criminals were selling cloned credit or debit cards from 180 dollars and were charging commissions ranging from 10 percent to 40 percent for money laundering services depending on the amount of the operation.
Cyber criminals are also offering delivery for products bought illegally.
"If buyers want to use stolen bank details to buy products online, but are wary of being traced through the delivery address, the cyber criminals will make the purchase and forward the goods for a fee of between 30 dollars and 300 dollars," PandaLabs said.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Our Future Through Cyber Space
A crash course for a One World Order!
As we veer out of control on a crash course with destiny, I see the internet and “cloud” community becoming more and more important in our short lives. Almost every aspect of our lives, now, can be performed from the “comfort and safety” of our own homes with the use of a computer and an internet connection. Just look at this course for instance. It is being taught from the classroom of the future today. No student ever actually has to set foot on a college campus through the use of technology.
But it is this technology that will ultimately drive the communities of the planet to a One World Order. What no government or country has yet to acknowledge is the fact that more and more people are becoming part of cyber communities all linked together with one another around the world. Slowly becoming one community spread across the globe. I feel proof of this is the fact that Cyber Monday is starting to generate more revenue than Black Friday in the United States. Around the globe, businesses have seen a drop in customers in their stores, but the increase in cyber sales has actually increased their profits.
Organized crime has already adapted to this new lifestyle by taking advantage of people uneducated in the ways of the cyber society. And as more and more cities offer their citizens a free pass onto the internet, via WAN, without teaching them how to use it safely, they are falling prey to the cyber criminals and their treachery. Phishing, SPAM, and hacking are becoming the new way to rob a bank. You don’t need to physically walk in and hold it up anymore, just hack the network and hijack the accounts.
As the control of the world’s infrastructure is converted to the “cloud”, no two governing bodies will be able to control “THE” network. It will become the sole responsibility of one governing body, the ultimate organized crime syndicate. This governing body alone will control what we see and do over the “net”. Censorship will run rampant and out of control, and the netizens of the future will never know that their entire existence is being controlled by this governing body. Every aspect of their daily lives could be planned out for them and freedom as we know it now will become a thing of the past.
These are my greatest fears as we speed down the winding roads of life toward an unpredictable and unforeseeable future. Blink and you could miss something!!!!
Here is an interesting article on the subject:

A New World Order in Cyberspace -

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Risky Business & What Can We Do About It?
In this round of learning the main focus was on keeping your computer and information safe while on the internet.
For me, there were three main points that I came away with from the readings and lectures. Always use some form of anti-virus software, keep everything up to date with current security patches and software updates, and probably one of the most important ones, and always keep your anti-virus software up to date with the latest virus definition file. One thing about all three of these points is to update and/or patch software as soon it is available. If you do not have Windows set to update automatically, I highly suggest that change your settings. Microsoft is constantly putting updates out there to patch security holes almost as soon as they find out about them.
Since learning about all the different ways hackers can gain access to your computer without you even knowing they are there is scary. There are a few telltale signs that something is going on. Your computer starts to boot really slow all of sudden. It starts running extremely slow. Programs you don’t recognize start showing up in your task manager sometimes. There are some more devious programmers out there that have it so their programs do not show up in the task manager.

Wireless networks are some of the easiest ways for a criminal to gain access to your system, mainly because not many people properly secure their networks. One thing you can do is enable your security features, either through your operating system, or through your router, if you have one. I use a router and have my security turned on. Oh and also, DO NOT FORGET to change the login and password for your router. All routers of the same brands use the same default login and password. So if you do not change it, you are leaving your system that much more open for attack. Here is a screen shot of my security:

As you can see I use WPA Personal with TKIP encryption. I blanked out my network name for security reasons.
Here is some information that you might find interesting to know. It is actually safer to use your credit card online than it is to use it in most retail outlets. The reason being is that most stores have not upgraded to the newer WPA security, they are still using WEP to “secure” their networks. I found out that by downloading some free software from the internet and setting up a laptop with Linux and the free software, that I will not mention, I was able to go out and do some war driving. What I found was that stores that have been around for many years were still using WEP, and I was able to get in to their systems. Now the newer stores that have built their own buildings, within the last 5 years or so, are using WPA and I was not able to get in. I drove all over the Boulevard and Sheridan Drive area. I was really amazed at the information that is obtainable. Stores that when you talk to them over the phone make you think that their system is completely safe and that customer data is not stored on the same network. I found out otherwise, the data was actually saved on the network. Now I am not about to name the franchise, because I do not want any legal type backlash, but I would think twice before using credit at the store. I will be using cash whenever possible now.

When you shop online, you are using a secure network, locked down with WPA and all the latest software, plus whatever security measures you have in place. Now that doesn’t mean that just because you have all this security in place that you can never be hacked. There are always people out in the world that are finding ways to get around the latest and greatest security measures that are currently in place. Having the security in place greatly decreases the chances of someone gaining unlawful entry into your network.
People need to realize that using some else’s wireless connection, even if it is just to use the internet to check email, is the same as splicing into your neighbors cable just to watch TV for free. It is considered “Theft of Services” and comes with some jail time and hefty fines.



Sunday, November 14, 2010


Information Security Awareness Contest

Educause Poster and Video Contest for 2011!


I would like to start out by introducing everyone to the Educause Poster and Video Contest for 2011. I feel the best way to describe what it is about is a screen capture from their website.

The topics for the contest are as follows:
Ideas for topics include, but are not limited, to:
A strong supporter of Educause and the contest is CyberWatch. The ultimate goal for CyberWatch is “to improve information assurance education at all levels: high school, associate, baccalaureate, and advanced degree levels.”
Here is a screen capture from CyberWatch explaining the mission, vision, and goals of the organization.


CyberWatch has a great slide show overview in PDF format that explains a lot as well. You will need the Adobe Acrobat Reader, found HERE. I suggest that everyone get involved with CyberWatch and become a registered member. It is FREE and easy!!!
My partner and I have been looking into Wireless/Mobile Security combined with Safeguarding Data/Information for the contest. One source I found particularly interesting was:
Debbah, Merouane, et al. "Wireless physical layer security." EURASIP Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking (2009). Academic OneFile. Web. 14 Nov. 2010.
You may not be able to follow the above link unless you have access to Niagara County Community Collage’s library online so that is why I supplied the original source of the information.
Merouane Debbah presents a technical write up explaining wireless physical layer security. There is a lot of technical verbage in this paper so you will want a dictionary handy if you are not familiar with some of the technical language involved.
So get inspired and enter the contest, and do not forget to become a member of CyberWatch!!!!!!!!!