Saturday, December 1, 2012

Hacker attack siphons off $150,000 in teacher salaries from payroll systems

Hackers used the American Thanksgiving holiday to launch a crafty attack against a local school district in the state of Wisconsin, compromising a direct deposit system, and stealing $150,000 intended for teachers.

Administrators in the Stanley-Boyd school district in the western part of Wisconsin were alerted to the attack by their bank on November 21, according to a report in the Chippewa Herald.

According to the newspaper, the attackers compromised the district's network and altered its direct deposit file, supplanting employee bank account information with accounts belonging to the attackers.

AnchorBank, based in Madison, Wisconsin, noticed the unusual activity and alerted the district. The district has notified the FBI, which is investigating.

In the meantime, AnchorBank said it had been able to retrieve a portion of the stolen payroll as of November 27, and believed it could recover most of the lost funds.




Hacking school districts isn't about changing grades "War Games"-style.

(Though that still happens, too!) .

Rather, school districts and municipalities are a prime target for cybercriminal gangs, many based outside the United States.

Hackers are attracted to the small towns because they often are short on IT security expertise, but have easy access to cash through bank accounts and lines of credit. Beyond that, the decentralized nature of many municipal operations can make detection difficult.

In just the latest incident, in October, the town of Burlington, Washington, disclosed that hackers had compromised a number of town systems used to operate an online utility billing system and stolen $400,000 from a city bank account.

Article Source

How Much Do Antivirus Rankings Matter to You?

German antivirus lab AV-Test recently tested several security suites. Most of them declined since a few months ago, particularly Microsoft Security Essentials, our favorite Windows antivirus app. We still love it, but the recent AV-Test makes us wonder: How much do these ratings matter to you?

Microsoft Security Essentials was half a point shy of passingthe AV-Test, due to problems detecting zero-day threats. Other recent tests by AV Comparatives were better, but still mixed. That said, Microsoft Security Essentials has never been the top ranker in these tests (usually the top spots are the paid security suites), but it's something worth pondering.

What do you think? Does it matter to you?