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Volexity believes that the Dukes are likely working to gain long-term access into think tanks and (nongovernmental organizations) and will continue to launch new attacks for the foreseeable future, the security firms chief executive, Steven Adair, said in a blog post.
Steven Adair, co-founder of U.S.-based security firm Volexity, said that code hidden on pro-democracy websites last year, including those of the Democratic Party and the Alliance for True Democracy, suggested a group he said "we strongly suspect to be Chinese... who is very well resourced."
Date: Nov 29, 2015
Category: Business
Source: Google
Attackers exploit latest Flash bug on large scale, says researcher
"CVE-2011-2110 is being exploited in the wild on a fairly large scale," said Steven Adair, a researcher with the Shadowserver Foundation, a volunteer-run group that tracks vulnerabilities and botnets. "In particular this exploit is showing up as a drive-by in several legitimate websites, including t
Security experts recommended that other security and infrastructure companies look to their own systems and tighten up security. RSA's contention that the attack is an advanced persistent threat, or APT, could mean that the company believes a government may be behind the attack, says Steven Adair, a security researcher with the Shadowserver Foundation, a group that tracks cyber attacks and botnets.