Was malware to blame for the so-called "computer glitch" that over a weekend took down a handful of the country's largest banks' ATMs and online banking sites?
Charlie Lai, chief information officer of Fairwinds Credit Union, a $1.5 billion institution serving central Florida, calls reports of the massive ATM and online outage "ridiculous."
Malware is likely to blame for the so-called "computer glitch" that over the weekend took down a handful of the country's largest banks' ATMs and online banking sites.
The card skimming epidemic at pay-at-the-pump terminals in Alachua, Fla., has pushed local law enforcement to encourage consumers to pay for their gas with cash.
The one remaining hurdle for Heartland is located in a courtroom in Houston, Texas, where U.S. District Judge Lee Rosenthal presides over the last remaining class action suit.
The move to chip and PIN in the United States may be closer than we think. Witness: United Nations Federal Credit Union's announcement to push EMV to U.S. cardholders.
It's been almost a year since the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued its red flag advisory about foreclosure scams. Now it looks like the agency sees another spike in mortgage modification scams hitting the U.S.
Earlier this week, I blogged on what have been the most popular interviews I've conducted in 2009 - and there have been a lot of them.
Today I'd like to talk about my favorite interviews of the year. And there have been a magnificent seven of those.
Know what scares security expert John Pescatore the most? The image of a remote employee sitting a home office or public setting, plugging into an unsecured network, accessing critical data via a personal laptop or PDA.
Organizations have never had so many security risks in so many remote locations, says Pescatore,...
Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) is a topic of interest throughout an organization - and increasingly at the board of director level.
But how does a security leader engage the board on ERM - and keep it engaged?
So, how many banking institutions have failed in 2009?
If you pay attention to the popular news media, then your answer is 106. And you'd be partially right. That is the number of FDIC-insured banks to have failed this year - the most in any year since about two President Bushes ago.
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