Spotlight | Reviews | Current Issue | Newsletter | Subscribe | Contact
Departments


price comparison with idealo.com
Price comparison for:
fast servers for your business solution, fast notebooks for long flights, software for good results, TomTom navigation systems, PC hardware, Plasma and LCD TVs, Computer Hardware and Software, MP3 Player, highend Laptops and many more. Get reviews of your favourite digital camera or  of  new dvd-players.

user friendly

  linux-magazine.com » Issues » 2007 » 77 » CAT AND MOUSE  

Looking for signs of a network attack

CAT AND MOUSE

Author(s): JOE CASAD

If you think your systems are too obscure for an attacker to worry about, think again. Today’s intruders are happy for any victim.

Are your doors locked? Is you data safe? In the beginning, the first network intruders were just playing around. They slipped in just to prove they could – as an intellectual challenge or maybe a chance to feel brave. Times have changed, though, and if you care about security, you’d better change with them. Today’s systems hold critical information with a cash value – credit card numbers, medical records, email addresses. And the system itself can become a tool of the intruder. Cyber-criminals employ sophisticated techniques to commandeer perfectly ordinary computers for forwarding spam and launching denial of service attacks. And the teenage vandals? They are still out there also. To stay ahead of them all, you’ll need to know what they know – and you’ll need to know how to look for their tracks. We’ll show you what to look for in this month’s Detecting Intruders cover story.


Read full article as PDF »


Comments


Slashdot it! Delicious Digg
Related Articles
EYE ON CHANGE Monitoring directories with iWatch
QUICK CHECK Looking for intruders with lsof
No More Downloads!

Save the download and take Linux Magazine DVDs instead.

Each DVD contains a full distro like Ubuntu, SUSE, Mandriva, Fedora, or Debian and comes with the corresponding issue of Linux Magazine.

Don't waste time downloading Linux!

more...

 

In the US and Canada, Linux Magazine is known as Linux Pro Magazine.
Entire contents © 2008 [Linux New Media USA, LLC]
Linux New Media web sites:
North America: [Linux Pro Magazine]
UK/Worldwide: [Linux Magazine]
Germany: [Linux-Magazin] [LinuxUser] [EasyLinux] [Linux-Community] [Linux-Nachrichten] [Linux Events]
Eastern Europe: [Linux Magazine Poland] [Linux Community Poland] [Darmowe Programy Poland] [Open Source DVD Poland] [Linux Magazin Romania]
International: [Linux Magazine Brazil] [Linux Magazine Spanish]
Corporate: [Linux New Media AG]