October 2007 issue
An industry born of necessity
Israel is home to a cluster of IT security vendors, as its military-trained
citizens turn national security concerns into a booming export business.
Eleanor Dallaway visited the country to find out more
We've been expecting you, Mr Bond
Corporate spies are taking full advantage of IT, and Ron Condon
finds that high-tech industrial espionage is often easy to carry
out
Double jeopardy
Laws and regulations such as the European Markets in Finance Directive
can cause organisations problems, often requiring them to keep records
while restricting their abilities to access personal data, says
Mick James
Face-off in Oxford
Students are taking to social networking sites in large numbers,
but a disciplinary investigation by Oxford University which trawled
Facebook for evidence shows how such services can expose private
data. SA Mathieson and Mike Simpson investigate
Zero-day, but not zero-risk
August’s Black Hat conference heard that zero-day vulnerabilities
can be reverse-engineered. Cath Everett assesses the damage
To boldly make the quantum leap
The technology behind Star Trek’s photo torpedoes could soon
have the same effect on those wanting to break cryptography, argues
Alan Woodward of Charteris
Features index
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