Summer Surge Barrel SeriesRepeating Event
FeaturedThe Expo At Glenrose
202 E Bo Gibbs Dr Glen Rose , TX 76043
The Expo At Glenrose
202 E Bo Gibbs Dr Glen Rose , TX 76043
Marshall City Arena
3310 Popular Street Marshall, TX 75671
(JCSP) Johnson County Sheriff's Posse Indoor & Outdoor Arena
1315 North Main Street, Cleburne, TX 76033
M7 Arena
8001 FM3136, Alvarado, TX 76009
Northcrest Equestrian Center
3900 CR 805 B Cleburne , TX 76301
Parker County Arena
1010 Farm to Market Road 1885, Weatherford, TX 76088
T8 Arena
837 Lumas Rd, DeRidder, LA 70634
Extraco Events Center
4601 Bosque Boulevard, Waco, TX 76710
Nolan County Expo Center
220 Coliseum, Sweetwater, TX 79556
newsmaker If you have an e-mail account, chances are you’re used to seeing messages that purport to come from PayPal but which are actually spam from attackers trying to get you to click on a link to a malicious Web site and give up your password or other sensitive information. Phishing attacks are commonplace. PayPal advises people not to click on suspicious-looking links, but given the scope of the problem, more needs to be done to protect people. For more info click here
Microsoft is investigating a possible vulnerability in Internet Explorer 7 that could help cybercrooks launch phishing scams, the company said Wednesday. An attacker can use an error message displayed by the latest Microsoft browser to send Web surfers to malicious Web sites that will display with the address of a trusted site, such as a bank, Aviv Raff, a developer in Israel, wrote on his Web site. Raff included an example where the error message directs the Web surfer to a site of his choice. For more info click hereÂ
There’s still plenty of spam going around, but “adult” spam has been on a steady decline and hit an all-time low in February, according to a new Symantec report. Of all the spam filtered by Symantec’s e-mail security tools in February, only 3 percent could be classified as adult spam, the company said Tuesday. Adult spam, according to Symantec, contains or refers to “products or services intended for persons above the age of 18” and is “often offensive or inappropriate. Examples: porn, personal ads, relationship advice.” For more info click hereÂ
Microsoft is investigating two recently disclosed security vulnerabilities that affect Internet Explorer 7 and Windows Vista, the company said Monday. The vulnerabilities aren’t considered high-risk, yet they affect the latest releases of Microsoft’s Web browser and operating system software. Microsoft has promoted the security of both IE 7 and Windows Vista. The flaws could let attackers get their hands on sensitive user information, security experts have warned. For more info click hereÂ
Pretexting: Your Personal Information RevealedWhen you think of your own personal assets, chances are your home, car, and savings and investments come to mind. But what about your Social Security number (SSN), telephone records and your bank and credit card account numbers? To people known as “pretexters,†that information is a personal asset, too. Pretexting is the practice of getting your personal information under false pretenses. Pretexters sell your information to people who may use it to get credit in your name, steal your assets, or to investigate or sue you. Pretexting is against the law. How
For more info click here All Internet service providers would need to track their customers’ online activities to aid police in future investigations under legislation introduced Tuesday as part of a Republican “law and order agenda.” Employees of any Internet provider who fail to store that information face fines and prison terms of up to one year, the bill says. The U.S. Justice Department could order the companies to store those records forever.
For more info click here Individuals who sell or deliberately misuse others’ personal data in the U.K. could now face a penalty of up to two years in prison. The previous penalty stipulated for the charge in the Data Protection Act 1998 was a fine. Now data thieves risk up to six months in prison for a summary conviction, while for a conviction on indictment, they could get up to two years, the U.K. Department for Constitutional Affairs said Wednesday.
For more info click here In October 2004, all but one member of the U.S. House of Representatives voted for a bill that was supposed to curtail the threat of malicious PC-disrupting spyware. But the Senate ignored it. So the House once again approved spyware regulations in May 2005, which yielded precisely the same lack of a result. Hoping that the third time proves the charm, House leaders on Thursday introduced a bill that would once again try to impose 31 pages of regulations on the software industry in an effort to define what types of activities
For the rest of the story click here Phishing attacks have outnumbered e-mails infected with viruses and Trojan horse programs for the first time, according to security experts. Security mail services vendor MessageLabs reported on Monday that in January 2007, one in 93.3 e-mails (1.07 percent) comprised some form of phishing attack. There were fewer e-mails–one in 119.9, or 0.83 percent–infected with viruses.
For more info click here An alleged marketer of online porn has agreed to pay a $465,000 penalty to settle spam charges, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission said Tuesday. Under a proposed settlement, TJ Web Productions has also agreed to adhere to federal spam laws, the FTC said in a statement. This means the company has promised to use the phrase “sexually explicit” in message subject lines and ensure that the initially viewable area of the message does not display explicit images.
For the rest of the story click here Microsoft has quietly flipped the switch on a new feature in Internet Explorer 7 meant to combat phishing scams. The software giant in early January made a change on its computer systems that allowed Web sites fitted with a new type of security certificate to display a green-filled address bar in IE 7, Markellos Diorinos, a product manager for Windows at Microsoft, said in an interview.
For more info click here Two South Korean computer programmers have been arrested on suspicion of sending out 1.6 billion spam e-mail messages in violation of the country’s commerce laws, police said on Tuesday. The two men, one aged 20 and the other 26, are suspected of sending out the unsolicited e-mail messages between September and December last year in what police describe as one of the biggest spam blasts in the country’s history.
For more info click here Priceline.com, Travelocity.com and Cingular Wireless have settled over charges that they used secret adware Internet software programs as marketing tools, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said on Monday. This is the first time marketers have been held responsible for ads displayed through adware, the software that automatically displays promotional material, Cuomo’s office said in a statement. The settlement calls for Priceline.com, Travelocity and Cingular, the wireless unit of AT&T, to pay New York $35,000, $30,000 and $35,000, respectively, to cover penalties and investigatory costs.
CNET For more info click on above link Internet pioneer Vint Cerf has warned high-powered attendees at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, that the Internet is at serious risk from botnets. Vast networks of compromised PCs, used by criminals for sending spam and spyware and for launching denial-of-service attacks, are reported to be growing at an alarming rate in terms of their potential. Cerf, now an employee of Google, warned that they could undermine the future of the Internet and likened their spread to a pandemic.
AOL phisher faces up to 101 years in prison | CNET News.com For more info click on above link A California man faces up to 101 years in federal prison after a jury found him guilty of sending out e-mail scams as well as related crimes. Jeffrey Brett Goodin, 45, of Azusa, was convicted Friday on multiple counts by a jury in the U.S. District Court for Central District of California in Los Angeles, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said in a statement.