An indispensable source of reference for anyone concerned with computer security, the Bulletin is the forum through which leading security researchers publish the latest security research and information in a bid to share knowledge with the security community. Publications cover the latest threats, new developments and techniques in the security landscape, opinions from respected members of the industry, and more. The Bulletin archives offer informative articles going back to 1989. Our editorial team is happy to hear from anyone interested in submitting a paper for publication.
Instrumenting binaries is a technique that is rapidly gaining popularity among security researchers. Profiling the binary beforehand can provide a lot of important information about the target, as Aleksander Czarnowksi explains.
Read moreDr Vesselin Bontchev shares his views on whitelisting and why conventional anti-virus scanners will be around for a long time to come.
Read moreSorin Mustaca provides a roundup of this year's EU Spam Symposium.
Read moreJohn Graham-Cumming has the details of France's new national anti-spam service, Signal Spam.
Read moreJohn Hawes takes a detailed look at Avira's home-user internet security setup.
Read more'The WildList is more pertinent than ever - particularly given today's threat landscape.' Mary Landesman, About.com.
Read morePeter Ferrie describes TIOS/Tigraa, a virus that runs on Texas Instruments calculators.
Read moreAndrew Walenstein (University of Louisiana at Lafayette)
Arun Lakhotia (University of Louisiana at Lafayette)
Michael Venable and colleagues explain how program-matching techniques can help in triage, in-depth malware analysis and signature generation.
Read moreMartin Overton reviews Syngress's latest security title: 'Botnets - the killer web app'.
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