Kaspersky Internet Security (often abbreviated to KIS) is an internet security suite developed by Kaspersky Lab compatible with Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X. Kaspersky Internet Security offers protection from malware, as well as email spam, phishing and hacking attempts, and data leaks. Kaspersky Lab Diagnostics results are distributed to relevant developers through the MIT License.
Kaspersky tends to release their new major security software beta's around this time of the year, as evident from KAV 2010 and KIS 2010 beta release in April '09 and release of Final version of KAV 2011 and KIS 2011 by September last year after completion of beta testing. Sticking to the schedule Kaspersky Internet Security 2012 Beta is out now with some great new features and an completely revamped user-interface. A complete feature tour with images and download link available after the jump.
Kaspersky Internet Security 2012 Download Crack
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On Thursday of last week Kaspersky Lab announced the discovery of Gauss, a malware virus that appears to be related to previously uncovered malware Stuxnet, DuQu, and Flame. As with these viruses, the cybersecurity firm believes Gauss was created with the support of a nation-state, and because many infections were found in Lebanese banks it is speculated that the malware was targeting the financial transactions of Hezbollah. On Friday Lebanon's former Information Minister Michel Samaha was detained for allegedly plotting a series of bomb attacks against Sunni Muslims in northern Lebanon on behalf of Syrian President Bashar Assad. Samaha is described as an associate of Hezbollah and personal friend of Assad, whereas Lebanese Sunnis have generally sided with anti-Assad forces in Syria. More information has surfaced on last week's arrest of Manfred K., a civilian employee of NATO at Ramstein airbase in Germany. Although unconfirmed, there are reports that Russian FSB offered Manfred money for information on U.S. global tactical plans as well as the passwords of senior military officers. SPYPEDIA is also monitoring the 15 August 2012 shooting at the Family Research Council in the event that it was an act of domestic terrorism. Log in to your subscription to SPYPEDIA to stay abreast of the latest espionage, counterterrorism, security and cybersecurity news from around the globe. All new additions can be found by simply navigating to the" New Content" tab, which features the most recent updates in the SPYPEDIA database. Subscribe to SPYPEDIA with a 20% discount. Use code SPY20 A special SPYPEDIA announcement for our members who are or will be in the DC Metropolitan area: You are cordially invited to attend the kickoff of SPYPEDIA's Global Terrorism Espionage and Cybersecurity FREE Monthly Briefings (G-TEC Briefing) on 2 October 2012.These FREE hour-long briefings are meant to be a comprehensive update of current terrorism, espionage, and cybersecurity events around the world. The briefings will draw analysis and emerging trends from SPYPEDIA'S exhaustive data collection to review important security events that may have flown under the mainstream media's radar, including espionage penetrations and arrests, cyberespionage and terrorist events. We will also highlight and review, as appropriate, new books and reports to keep you abreast of developments in these important national security concerns. This essential international update is provided exclusively to you, our SPYPEDIA members, as well as private and government security, counterintelligence, counterterrorist and intelligence professionals. These 8am to 9am briefings are scheduled to start October 2 and will be held at the Microsoft Store in Tyson's Corner Center Mall in Tyson's Corner, Virginia, located on the upper level. We plan to conduct briefings the first week of each month and to provide new information at every briefing. Coffee is free and we will ensure we end in time for individuals to continue on to work. 2012 DATES: Tuesday, October 2, 2012 Wednesday, November 7, 2012 Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Silent Running. Russian Attack Submarine Sailed in Gulf of Mexico Undetected for Weeks, U.S. Officials Say. A Russian nuclear-powered attack submarine armed with long-range cruise missiles operated undetected in the Gulf of Mexico for several weeks and its travel in strategic U.S. waters was only confirmed after it left the region, the Washington Free Beacon has learned. It is only the second time since 2009 that a Russian attack submarine has patrolled so close to U.S. shores. The stealth underwater incursion in the Gulf took place at the same time Russian strategic bombers made incursions into restricted U.S. airspace near Alaska and California in June and July, and highlights a growing military assertiveness by Moscow. The submarine patrol also exposed what U.S. officials said were deficiencies in U.S. anti-submarine warfare capabilities - forces that are facing cuts under the Obama administration's plan to reduce defense spending by $487 billion over the next 10 years. The Navy is in charge of detecting submarines, especially those that sail near U.S. nuclear missile submarines, and uses undersea sensors and satellites to locate and track them. The fact that the Akula was not detected in the Gulf is cause for concern, U.S. officials said. The officials who are familiar with reports of the submarine patrol in the Gulf of Mexico said the vessel was a nuclear-powered Akula-class attack submarine, one of Russia's quietest submarines. A Navy spokeswoman declined to comment. [Read more: Gertz/FreeBeacon/14August2012] Militants Attack Yemen Intelligence HQ, Killing 20. The death toll of an al-Qaida suspected attack on a Yemeni intelligence headquarters rose to 20 on Saturday, in the worst such attack in a year that highlights the challenges faced by the country's new leadership as it struggles to bring security and reconcile a military with split loyalties. The attack, in the heart of the port city of Aden, underscored al-Qaida's ability to launch deadly strikes despite a two-month Yemeni military offensive backed by the U.S. that earlier this year dislodged militants who had taken over a string of southern towns near Aden. In a coordinated attack, two groups of masked militants stormed the intelligence building from two sides, firing automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades, according to intelligence officials in the city and witnesses from the adjacent state TV and radio building. While one group clashed with guards of the intelligence building's main gate, a second threw a bomb at a small mosque, killing soldiers who were resting and sleeping inside, officials said. The gunmen then sprayed their victims with bullets before detonating a car bomb in front of the intelligence building, collapsing its facade. Witnesses said they saw gunmen open fire on three soldiers at a front gate, killing them on the spot, before launching rocket-propelled grenades at the building and mistakenly hitting the television offices. Two female reporters were critically wounded, witnesses said. By the end of the day, 20 were dead. All were military and security men except for one civilian, while six other civilians were injured aside from the reporters. The same intelligence building had come under attack in 2010 by al-Qaida. Saturday's attack, which took nearly 45 minutes, carries the fingerprints of the group, a security official said. [Read more: Al-Haj/AP/18August2012]
FBI Gives Police Free Tool to Convert Photos for Facial Recognition. Within weeks, police nationwide should be able to obtain free software for matching photos of unidentified suspects against the FBI's biometric database of 12 million mug shots, according to an Office of the Director of National Intelligence agency. The FBI and Homeland Security Department are experimenting with facial recognition to determine the real names of illegal immigrants, identify persons of interest in candid photos, and fulfill other law enforcement responsibilities. To make that happen, however, law enforcement agencies at every level of government must share images with compatible technology that they can afford, former FBI officials say. So, the bureau is offering agencies some of the equipment at no cost. "Later this summer the FBI will deploy the Universal Face Workstation software, a free-of-charge client application that will provide users with the tools for conducting and managing facial/photo searches with a minimal resource investment," Kshemendra Paul, program manager for the Information Sharing Environment within the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, wrote in his annual report to Congress. The document notes the FBI database under development, the $1 billion Next-Generation Identification system, recently began testing facial recognition on images of alleged perpetrators uploaded by several state agencies. Currently, only governments with operational facial recognition technology can participate in the trial. Those states now have access "to a national gallery of more than 12 million legally collected mug-shot photos to be searched in aid of investigations," Paul wrote. Facial searches could one day be faster and more accurate than police lineups, advocates say. This is not the first time the bureau has offered free biometric software to law enforcement partners. [Read more: Sternstein/NextGov/16August2012] Afghans to Spy on Own Troops to Stop 'Insider' Attacks. Afghan officials say they have launched an expanded effort to spy on their own police and army recruits, an acknowledgment that previous measures designed to reduce insurgent infiltration in the country's security services have failed. The steps come amid a spate of "insider" attacks that have shaken the U.S.-Afghan military partnership during a stage of the war that hinges on close partnership between the two forces. Nine U.S. troops have been killed by their Afghan counterparts in the past 12 days. They are among 40 coalition service members who have died in insider attacks this year. President Obama, in his most extensive comments to date on the issue, said Monday that his administration is "deeply concerned about this, from top to bottom." The Afghan measures include the deployment of dozens of undercover intelligence officers to Afghan security units nationwide, increased surveillance of phone calls between Afghan troops and their families, and a ban on cellphone use among new recruits to give them fewer opportunities to contact members of the insurgency, Afghan officials say. The initiatives appear aimed at addressing U.S. criticism that the Afghan security forces are not doing enough to ferret out insurgents within their ranks. The top U.S. military official, Gen. Martin Dempsey, was in Kabul on Monday for consultations on the matter, and Obama said he would soon be "reaching out" to Afghan President Hamid Karzai. "Soldiers must feel that they are under the full surveillance of their leadership at all levels," the Afghan army chief of staff, Gen. Sher Mohammad Karimi, said in an interview after meeting with Dempsey and other U.S. commanders. "Initially, it will have a negative impact on morale, but we have to do something. We have to look seriously at every individual." [Read more: Sieff/WashingtonPost/20August2012] 2ff7e9595c
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