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Why it pays to be secure – Chapter 3 – But how do I?
Our EMEA Security Program Manager, Henk van Roest, started this series internally and with his consent I am publishing it here in my blog as I think it contains a lot of great information for you to use. Security — you hear about it every day. Being responsible Read More...
Patch Management, a key step towards compliance!
As you might have read, I recently blogged about my infrastructure and the future of a platform towards a better management of compliance – honestly, I actually played with our latest technology . I wrote about Deploying PKI Time Sync on Virtual DCs Now, Read More...
Insights into Windows 7 Engineering
Are you interested to learn how Windows 7 (next version of Windows) is engineered? Are you willing to get in touch with the engineering team? Then read their blog: Engineering Windows 7 Roger Read More...
The latest SQL Injection Attacks
Well, there was quite some chatter over the last few weeks with regards to the massive defacements we saw based on SQL Injection Attacks. So, what was really new? Close to nothing. Well, this is not completely true. The new thing we have seen with these Read More...
Bug Hidden for more than 25 Years
Wow, this was impressive: A Swiss Developer posted on Saturday a blog that he found a bug which remained hidden for more than 25 years: When seekdir() Won't Seek to the Right Position . BTW: It is in BSD, where the code is available to everyone and as Read More...
Posted 14 May 08 09:25 by rhalbh | 0 Comments   
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Best Practices for Microsoft PKI & Certificate Management
You might know Brian Komar. He wrote numerous books on PKI and Certificate Management and he is a well-known speaker at quite some events like TechEd and IT Forum. Now, nCipher organized a Webimar on Best Practices for Microsoft PKI & Certificate Read More...
Analysis of recent vulnerabilities
Michael Howard just wrote a post about recent vulnerabilities of third-party applications he looked into. This is pretty interesting as it shows certain challenges of current processes (e.g. what do you do with third-party software you rely on?): Recent Read More...
Only the Easiest Way is the Secure Way
We, being security professionals, are often "just" looking for the most secure way to implement a certain task. Often we tend to forget the user when we implement these measures. I once visited a customer showing me their ultimately secure solution to Read More...
Posted 13 July 07 08:30 by rhalbh | 6 Comments   
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