Cyber security

Cyber Security is most important issue for government, business and individual users. Attacks have been initiated by individuals, as well as countries. In this it usually include the government networks, defence, companies, or political organizations, depending upon whether the attacker was seeking military intelligence,
conducting diplomatic or industrial espionage, or intimidating political activists for their target. In addition, national borders mean little or nothing to cyber attackers, and attributing an attack to a specific location can be difficult, which also makes a response problematic.
Breaches are also defined to include misdirected or undelivered faxes, emails, and parcels, or other errors involving responsible parties who have no interest in accessing or misusing the data.

A few popular case studies are here of cyber security

Case I – 29April2012

We all know that VIPs get better security than the commoners in India, and with the craze for ‘phoren’ foreign dignitaries even more so. But wait a minute. There was an embarrassing security situation when police wireless system failed during the BRICS meeting. This after the ‘switch over’ was done ahead of the commonwealth games in 2010 itself and in the national capital! Any guesses on how robust the Aadhaar authentication system will be in rural areas?
In March, when the five heads of state (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) were in Delhi for the BRICS summit, the Delhi Police’s communication system collapsed. The Rs. 100-crore Tetra system was brought in to replace the old wireless sets. Terrestrial Trunked Radio (Tetra) — a professional mobile radio and two-way transceiver — collapsed during a major mock drill in the city on February 15 too, and gave the police problems during the April 15 MCD polls.

Case II – 27May2012

Protesting hackers target social sites on RComm platform . Users of the service who tried to access popular websites like Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo and Gmail instead saw a message from the hackers announcing their protest against their “freedom being taken away”.

Anonymous released admin logs from servers they hacked at http://pastehtml.com/view/bz8kycy0o.html, Anonymous OpIndia alleged that Reliance had blocked certain web pages, including the Facebook pages of staff protesting against Air India. Reliance Communications spokesperson said that they had “investigated the matter and confirm that all R-Com servers and websites are intact.

STELLAR will always at your service to protect either a normal company data or government sensitive and confidential data.

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