Secure USB Drive

Secure USB Drive: Posts tagged » USB thumb drives

Dror Todress

It’s the Data That Counts

14 ,October, 2009 From Dror Todress

With more and more entertainment content being released as ‘special edition’ USB flash drives, here are two of the more extreme examples of drive packaging that have been announced this week.

First, here’s a submachine gun-shaped drive for US rap group Get Busy Committee’s new album, released later this month.  And here’s a special edition 4GB drive for the home release of the latest Star Trek movie.

The good news is, with designs as striking as these, users are much less likely to lose them.  However, the temptation to use the huge capacities of the drives to store personal data is also strong.  Despite the novelty and the wow-factor, we would advise keeping such special drives for entertainment only, and using a secure flash drive for any business or sensitive personal data.

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Dror Todress

New Botnet Breaks into Corporate America

1 ,October, 2009 From Dror Todress

A new large-scale malware outbreak is currently believed to have infected at least 50 of America’s Fortune 100 companies.

Over 70 variants of the malware, known as Mariposa, have been identified, with complex methods of action including email address harvesting, injecting code into known system processes, and downloading further malware onto corporate computers and networks. 

Like Conficker, this new malware can spread by multiple mechanisms, including running automatically from USB flash drives, via an Internet-based update module, and across the MSN Messenger chat network.

Also like Conficker, the exact motivation or the people behind the threat are not known.  But it’s worth checking your AV signatures are fully updated – and we would recommend the use of secure USB drives with onboard anti-malware protection, too.

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Dror Todress

USB Malware Warning for Apple’s Snow Leopard

3 ,September, 2009 From Dror Todress

As you may have seen in the last week or so, the latest version of Apple’s Macintosh OS, known as Snow Leopard, includes for the first time features to detect and warn users about some types of malware.

However, a number of external parties have tested these features, and found that they will only detect the specific malware if it’s encountered via a Web browser.  The features will not detect malware if it is carried and inserted into the machine via a removable drive, such as a USB flash drive.

Although Apple has said for many years that Mac users don’t really need to worry about malware, the threat landscape is constantly changing.  So Mac users should be careful about possible infections from any source, whether on the web or by removable media.

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Dror Todress

Malware Threat Grows Again

2 ,August, 2009 From Dror Todress

Our anti-virus partner McAfee has released its Q2 Threats Report (PDF at link), and like the company’s Q1 report from earlier this year, it is sobering reading. 

The report says that spam volumes have increased by 140% since March, driven by major growth in botnet activity.  14 million new computers became parts of botnets in Q2 (that’s more than 150,000 per day), an increase of 16% over the previous quarter.

McAfee also reported growth in password-stealing Trojans, which is more proof that making money from illegal activity on the Internet is now a focus for criminal gangs.

The company also reported a surge in so-called Auto-Run malware, which exploits Windows’ Auto-Run capabilities and is most commonly spread via USB and portable devices.  As you’ll know, our Cruzer Enterprise with onboard McAfee AV can prevent the spread of malware via this vector, helping to protect corporate networks against this fast-emerging threat.

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Dror Todress

The Latest on Data Breaches

21 ,June, 2009 From Dror Todress

With around 250 data breaches publicly reported in the United States between Jan. 1 and Jun. 12 this year, rogue employees and hackers were the major causes according to figures released this week by the Identity Theft Resource Center.

Theft by employees and hacking were each responsible for 18% of all incidents, an increase of around 10% compared with the same period in 2008.

The Center also found that 14% of breaches so far this year were due to data contained on lost or stolen digital media, such as a laptop or USB thumb drives.  That’s still a significant number – and all the more reason to consider using a secure USB flash drive solution, such as our Cruzer Enterprise range.

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Dror Todress

Malware risk on flash drives will grow in next year

19 ,April, 2009 From Dror Todress

The number of malware attacks rose by more than 200% in 2008, according to the latest EMEA Internet Security Threat Report from security vendor, Symantec.

During the course of the year, the company reported over 1.6 million new threats, making 2008 one of the worst ever in the anti-virus sector.  Trojan horses were the most common form of malware, accounting for 66% of the top potential infections in EMEA, as malware authors attempted to steal financial and other confidential data.

And one of the key attack vectors that the company warns will be used increasingly in 2009 and 2010 is USB memory sticks and other USB storage devices.  This follows the recent Conficker outbreak, which successfully exploited USB media to spread itself.  Malware experts agree that further worms will be found that can use USB drives to infect PCs and networks.

Yet again, the message is clear:  ensure your USB thumb drives are secured against malware risks.  Or use secure flash drives with onboard antivirus scanning, such as our Cruzer Enterprise drives, to stop USB-borne infections in their tracks.

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Dror Todress

USB security more important now than ever before

11 ,March, 2009 From Dror Todress

There are currently two key threat vectors:  malware (as shown by the recent Conficker / Downadup worm which spread via USB flash drives).  The second, and most dangerous, is the risk of data loss of theft – another key vector involving thumb drives.

Several recent surveys have reported that enterprises are increasing their security budgets in 2009, to match expected increases in security issues as a result of economic uncertainty.  For example, a Ponemon Institute survey of 950 people who had lost or left their jobs during the last 12 months, found nearly 60% of them took company information, such as customer contacts, when they left.

It’s not hard to see how the data breaches of the last 18 months — lost laptops, USB drives and CDs in the public and private sector — could be overtaken by data theft by former employees made redundant in the downturn.  Where previous breaches have been accidental, they may start to turn deliberate or malicious.

All the more reason to control the use of USB thumb drives, and ensure that company-issued drives can be secured with mandatory encryption and centrally managed.  This enables tracking of data copied to drives, and remote termination of drives if necessary.

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Dror Todress

Recalling Thumb Drives to Active Service?

6 ,March, 2009 From Dror Todress

How soon will USB thumb drives be recalled to service with the US military, following the ban in November 2008?  That’s the question put by Defense News, the leading weekly magazine for defense decision makers worldwide in its recent issue.

In an article looking at the issue of USB security – to which SanDisk’s Enterprise Division contributed – the reporter finds that the ban has proven disruptive to military personnel at all levels.

Equipment maintenance teams would load digital repair manuals into thumb drives and carry thousands of pages of technical data in their pockets.  Pilots would plan missions on computers, then transfer plans to their aircraft computers by memory stick.  And all types of data — briefings, videos, maps, documents and so on — was stored, shared and transferred between PCs using these drives.

They proved themselves capable of surviving dust, water and temperature extremes in Iraq and Afghanistan, with one observer saying they were “GI proof”.

When thumb drives are reintroduced, new security safeguards are likely to include USB Port controls, mandatory encryption on thumb drives, and automatic scanning for malware.  These last two are key features of the SanDisk Cruzer Enterprise range.

A date for the reintroduction of USB pen drives is not yet set, but observers believe it will happen because of the drives’ sheer convenience.

The full article is here.

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