Login

Username:

Password:

 
Lost Password?
Register now!


Did you know?
SafeInput will save a lot of work for your server.



Random FAQ
Disable soft-keyboard input.

Vulnerabilities & Exploits : IBM X-Force: Vulnerabilities down but more malicious
Posted by glm on 2008/12/22 18:05:59 (24 reads)





By :Negar Salek


Feb 12, 2008 5:32 PM




According to the report, 6,437 new vulnerabilities were publicly disclosed in 2007, a 5.4 percent decrease since 2006.

In 2005 and 2006 vulnerability growth was approximately 41 percent each year, with the X-Force Database historical average hovering at a 27 percent increase a year.

However, the news is not all positive, with the number of reported high risk vulnerabilities increasing by 28 percent in 2007 from the previous year.

“The percentage of high impact vulnerabilities had been decreasing over time however, 2007 experienced a slight upswing in the number of high impact vulnerabilities — from 16.2 percent in 2006 to 22 percent in 2007, this is the first such increase since 2004," stated the report.

X-Force defines high impact vulnerabilities as immediate remote or local access and/or unauthorised privileges such as buffer overflows, backdoors, and bypassing security on firewalls or other network components.

“This figure means we’re at a higher level of risk even though the lower level of vulnerabilities,” said Peter Allor, worldwide director of intelligence at IBM ISS.



Source from:







Other articles
2009/2/4 23:20:16 - Cloud computing is a storage spot for malware
2009/2/4 23:20:15 - Microsoft responds to Windows 7 security gripe
2009/2/4 23:20:12 - Web identity hijacking on the rise
2009/2/4 23:20:12 - Google glitch puts surfers in a quandary
2009/2/4 23:20:11 - Facebook plays down privacy concerns
2009/2/4 23:20:10 - Australian Computer Society to use Sophos security solution
2009/2/4 23:20:09 - Google working on fix for clickjacking vulnerability in Chrome
2009/2/4 23:20:08 - McAfee: Malware will use web and USB sticks to spread in 2009
2009/2/4 23:20:07 - With economy in tailspin, Monster discloses major breach
2009/2/4 23:20:06 - OS X 'pirate' trojan resurfaces
2009/2/4 23:20:05 - IE 8 approaching on formal release
2009/2/4 23:20:04 - Companies warned over use of Netbooks
2009/2/4 23:20:03 - Trend Micro signs up with BigFix
2009/2/4 23:17:08 - Banks urged to change security policies
2009/2/4 23:17:08 - Heartland incident provides opportunity to standardise data breach notification laws

The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

Articles