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Rich Baich, Deloitte &
Touch: ZeuS Trojan - What Your Anti-Virus Software Doesn’t See
January 06, 2012
Since
2007, the ZeuS Trojan has infected almost 4 million computers in the
United States alone. It can collect data on forms and documents, take
screen shots, steal passwords, and give remote access to the host
computer. Financial losses due to the ZeuS Trojan are estimated at up to
$60 million. What’s really worrisome, however, is that ZeuS can change
its signature and avoid detection by current antivirus solutions.
According to Deloitte & Touch principal and ICCS 2012 speaker Rich Baich,
there are at least 26 known variants of the ZeuS Trojan, but there may
actually be hundreds that haven’t yet been identified.
The third annual
International Conference on Cyber Security: A
White Hat Summit (ICCS 2012), a joint effort between the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and Fordham University, brings together
global leaders from law enforcement, industry and academia at Fordham’s
Lincoln Center campus from January 9 through 12, 2012. ICCS 2012 will be
an unparalleled opportunity for a first-hand look at critical
intelligence on cyber crime and security—including details of real life
operations. The conference will include three days of lectures, panel
discussions, sponsor presentations, exhibitions, and exceptional
networking opportunities.
Among the experts presenting at ICCS will be:
-
Howard
A. Schmidt, special assistant to the president and cybersecurity
coordinator: keynote address;
- General Keith B. Alexander,
commander, U.S. Cyber Command, director, National Security
Agency/Central Security Service, will deliver the special keynote
address;
- Thomas Ryan, co-founder and
managing partner, Provide Security: When Hackers Attack: Protecting Your
Online Identity;
- Giovanni DiCrescenzo, Telcordia
Technologies: Private Information and Cryptography—How Private is It?;
- Angelos Stavrou, professor of
computer science, George Mason University: Smart & Mobile Devices in
Foreign Wars: Locking Down Linux, Software Apps, and Communications;
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