Lisa Vaas

About

Lisa Vaas is News Editor/Operations for eWEEK.com and also serves as editor of the Database topic center. She has focused on customer relationship management technology, IT salaries and careers, effects of the H1-B visa on the technology workforce, wireless technology, security, and, most recently, databases and the technologies that touch upon them. Her articles have appeared in eWEEK's print edition, on eWEEK.com, and in the startup IT magazine PC Connection.

Microsoft Tackles Vista, Virtualization Patches

Patch Tuesday brings with it a host of security issues with Vista, issues with virtualization and a fun time for system administrators who deal with clients using some wildly popular Microsoft applications: Internet Explorer and Excel. On Aug. 14, Microsoft released nine security patches for 14 vulnerabilities, with six of the updates rated critical, in […]

Facebook Leaks Its Own Code

Social networking site Facebook on Aug. 12 exposed part of its source code. The code was then posted onto a newly created blog named Facebook Secrets, and Facebook is now telling people not to use it. Facebook, based in Palo Alto, Calif., issued a statement about the incident, stressing its minimal impact. “A small fraction […]

U.S. Airport Security Checkpoints Poised for Evolutionary Leap

On July 5, Transportation Security Administration airport screeners found a bag with two ice packs inside. The ice packs had clay inside them, rather than blue gel, were covered in tape and matched a description of materials on a TSA bulletin warning of dry runs for terrorist attacks. According to news reports, the 66-year-old grandmother […]

Patch Tuesday to Bring 9 Microsoft Bandages

Microsofts August Patch Tuesday will bring nine security bulletins to fix problems—six of which are rated “critical”—in Microsoft Windows and Office, according to Christopher Budd of the MSRC (Microsoft Security Response Center) on Aug. 9. The six bulletins that will affect Windows will require a restart and can be detected using Microsofts Baseline Security Analyzer […]

Biggest Pump-and-Dump Scam Ever Spikes Spam 445%

The largest spam attack ever tracked wound down Aug. 9 after delivering enough big, fat PDF files to increase total spam size 445 percent in one day, according to Postini, a hosted e-mail filtering company thats been tracking the attack since it started Aug. 7. Postini tracked a 53 percent jump in spam volume from […]

Carrier-Funded Report Says Internet Could Choke if Lawmakers Intrude

Carrier -Funded Report: Internet Could Choke if Lawmakers Intrude”> In a thinly veiled attempt to talk policy makers out of legislating for Net neutrality, an AT&T-backed report suggests that the net managers who have kept the machine growing all these years have innovated, know best how to keep innovating, and should be left alone to […]

Immunity Demos Automatic Exploit Tool

LAS VEGAS—Immunity, a company already well-known for making pen testing easy, demoed a new tool that will make writing exploits near-automatic. Immunity released the tool, called Debugger, here at the Defcon hackers convention on Aug. 3. Debugger is free for download, with its revenue being driven by paid ads from companies looking to hire the […]

The Good, the Bad, the Net Neutrality Detector

The Good, the Bad, the Net Neutrality Detector”> LAS VEGAS—A creaky old DNS rebinding design flaw has been dragged out of the Internets attic, had the dust blown off and shown to be freshly poisonous. As Dan Kaminsky, IOActives director of penetration testing showed at the Black Hat conference Aug. 1, all he needs to […]

$22M Worth of CDC Equipment Disappears

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports it cannot account for $22 million worth of computers and other equipment, according to a July 12 story from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Thievery is suspected behind some of the missing gear. According to news reports, the Inspector Generals office of the U.S. Department of Health and Human […]

2 Screws, 1 Plastic Cover, How Many Airports Infiltrated?

LAS VEGAS—Sections of our airports are being secured by two screws and a plastic cover. You can press your eyeballs into retina scanners, you can walk up to iris scanners, you can press your hand (or somebody with a meat cleaver can press your hand) into a vein hand scan, or you can just swipe […]