October issue of VB published

The October issue of Virus Bulletin is now available for subscribers to download.

The October 2006 issue of Virus Bulletin is now available for subscribers to browse online or download in PDF format.

VB100

Just a few of the things this month's issue has in store are:

  • DDoS: the rise from obscurity: Danny McPherson affirms that Distributed Denial of Service attacks are the greatest security threat facing ISPs today.
  • Chamber of horrors: Peter Ferrie has the details of W32/Chamb - the first virus to infect compiled HTML (CHM) files parasitically.
  • AV testing SANS virus creation: David Harley expresses his concerns about Consumer Reports' AV testing methodology in a letter to the director of the SANS Institute.
  • Scanning embedded objects in Word XML files: Christoph Alme looks at the embedding of arbitrary objects into Word 2003 XML files and shows why finding them and passing them onto the virus scanner is not such a 'walk in the park' as one might expect.
  • Comparative review: John Hawes serves up another VB comparative - this month putting 26 AV products through their paces on Windows 2000 Server.
  • AISK - a different approach : Mariusz Kozlowski describes the use of an anti-spam filter based on pattern recognition and artificial intelligence techniques.

Subscribers click here to access the issue.

If you are not already a subscriber why not take the chance to subscribe now - Virus Bulletin is currently offering the special discounted subscription rate of just $99 for new subscribers!

01 October 2006

Tags: virus bulletin  

 del.icio.us  digg this! digg this

Quick Links

Poll
Does your company allow you to use a personal laptop/mobile device to access company resources?
Yes, it's allowed
Yes, it's actively encouraged
No
I don't know
Leave a comment
View 1 comment

Jobs Career Sidebar

Malware Prevalence
Autorun |#######|
Encrypted/Obfuscated |#####|
Heuristic/generic |#####|
Sality |####|
Zbot |####|
 View this month's full report

Virus Bulletin currently has 225,202 registered users.