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Cover art by John Severin. Hollywood Life Stories.From the Pages of History, script by Paul Laikin. How Family Life Would Be If the Sexes Changed Places, script by Paul Laikin, art by John Severin. If Literature Were Written in the Gossip Columns, script by Paul Laikin. Fake ad for Viceboy cigarettes, script by Paul Laikin, art by John Severin.
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Famous Proverb Shut-Ups, script by Paul Laikin, art by John Severin. Jack Davis art on several strips. Cover price $0.25.
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Art by John Severin, Bill McCartney, Don Orehek, Pete Wyma, Vic Martin, Jack Tottwn, Noel Klineman, and Bob Zahn. Comic strip parody feature includes cameos, by Beetle Bailey, Mutt & Jeff, Popeye, Dick Tracy, Peanuts, Henry, Nancy, Pogo, Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Blondie, Alley Oop, Tarzan, Superman, Mandrake the Magician, Prince Valiant, the Lone Ranger, Archie, Little Orphan Annie, Dennis the Menace, and many others.
Severin cover. Cover price $0.25.
This item is not in stock. If you use the 'Add to want list' tab to add this issue to your want list, we will email you when it becomes available. Cover art by John Severin. Satire ad for Pan PM, art by John Severin as Sigbjorn. Ultra Realistic Motor Motoring Sets, art by John Severin as Sigbjorn. What Do TV Characters Do After the Show is Over, art by Bill McCartney; featuring Perry Mason, Lloyd Bridges, Ben Casey, and Superman.
Sports Go Show Biz, art by John Severin as Sigbjorn; featuring Keane, Houk, Mickey Mantle, Alfred Hitchcock. Architecture by Frank Wrong Lloyd, art by Larry Elderson as Elder. Status Symbols, art by John Severin as Sigbjorn. Famous Scenes From Great Broadway Movies, art by Vic Martin. Cover price $0.25.
Comcast says it’s not to blame after 200,000 user accounts were put up for sale online Comcast will reset the passwords of roughly 200,000 customers after their account information wound up for sale on a shadowy Web site, the company said Monday. The, including the e-mail addresses and passwords of Comcast customers, was listed for sale for $1,000 on a Dark Web site that was also marketing a number of other questionable goods. The Dark Web is a collection of sites that are publicly accessible but cannot found by search engines. Usually Dark Web users need specialized software or instructions to visit a specific Web address. Comcast said it was not hacked and that its systems and apps were not compromised. The company blamed the incident instead on unsuspecting customers who may have visited malware-laden sites or fallen victim to other schemes that allowed hackers to obtain their data.
Continued: Related. Certificate authority Comodo admits it incorrectly issued eight certificates that include forbidden internal server names or reserved IP addresses. In 2012, the Certificate Authority/Browser Forum banned the use of such designations for certs issued after Nov.
The decision was meant to cut off a common practice of CAs issuing certificates for internal servers that were not unique and exposed networks to man-in-the-middle attacks and other risks. Comodo senior research and development scientist Rob Stradling in a post to the CA/B forum that last Thursday it discovered that its CA system had issued the offending certs. Continued: Related. Third parties Owners of Smart TVs manufactured by California-based consumer electronics company Vizio should be aware that their viewing habits are being tracked and that information sold to third parties ('partners').
And, what's more, with a recent change of the company's privacy policy, the company has started providing this data to companies that “may combine this information with other information about devices associated with that IP address.” 'Beginning October 31, 2015, VIZIO will use Viewing Data together with your IP address and other Non-Personal Information in order to inform third party selection and delivery of targeted and re-targeted advertisements. These advertisements may be delivered to smartphones, tablets, PCs or other internet-connected devices that share an IP address or other identifier with your Smart TV,' the privacy policy. Continued: Related. Authorities today announced multiple indictments and arrests in connection with separate hacking incidents that resulted in the theft of more than 100 million customer records from some of the nation’s biggest financial institutions and brokerage firms, including JP Morgan Chase, E.Trade and Scottrade. Prosecutors in Atlanta and New York unsealed indictments against four men and one unnamed alleged co-conspirator in connection with a complex, sprawling scheme to artificially manipulate the price of certain publicly traded U.S.
The men allegedly laundered hundreds of millions of dollars from the scheme via a vast cybercrime network that included illegal online pharmacies, fake antivirus or “scareware” schemes, Internet casinos and even a Bitcoin exchange. After several days of intense work, Switzerland-based end-to-end encrypted e-mail provider ProtonMail has largely mitigated the DDoS attacks that made it for hours on end in the last week. The attacks have exceeded 100Gbps, and are still going on, but they are no longer capable of knocking ProtonMail offline for extended periods of time. The first attacker, the Armada Collective is a new hacking group motivated by financial gain who demanded a ransom from the company.
The second attack came from an unknown group. This second attack caused the bulk of the damage. Continued: Related. Devices @ the Tripwire State of Security blog: Just last week, police forces across Europe arrested individuals who they believed had been to spy on Android users. Now attention has been turned on to another piece of software that can spy on communications, secretly record conversations, snoop on browsing histories and take complete control of a remote device. But, unlike DroidJack, OmniRAT doesn’t limit itself to Android users – it can also hijack computers running Windows and Mac OS X too.
![Droidjack Droidjack](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125659936/935851333.jpg)
And that’s not the only difference between DroidJack and OmniRAT. Both of them may be being sold openly online, but OmniRAT retails for as little as $25 compared to DroidJack’s more hefty $210. In what’s becoming a monthly ritual, Adobe today pushed out an updated version of its that includes patches for critical vulnerabilities. Today’s update isn’t as voluminous as a most have been since the start of summer, nonetheless, since July when a run of updates addressed and including an last month, Adobe has fixed more than 80 vulnerabilities in the beleaguered software. Version 19.0.0.245 released today patches 17 vulnerabilities, all of them paving the way to remote code execution if exploited; Adobe said it has no reports of public exploits for any of the patched flaws. Continued:: See. 2015 has been a busy year for cyber-criminals, but don't expect them to take a vacation for 2016 either, at least that's the conclusion of the McAfee Labs Threats Predictions Report, released today by Intel Security.
Aggregating personal opinions from over 33 security leaders across the world, the report shows on what areas organizations should focus their efforts for the upcoming year. Ransomware will continue to cause troubles The major threat and one that anyone could have predicted is ransomware, which has had a 'spectacular' year in 2015, with some groups making hundreds of millions of dollars with their operations. Adobe Flash Player was the most problematic application of 2015 Continued: McAfee Report: (pdf). The fourth iteration of the world's worst ransomware Cryptowall has surfaced with gnarlier encryption tactics and better evasion tricks that have fooled current antivirus platforms. Ransomware has ripped through scores of businesses and end-user machines in sporadic and targeted attacks that have cost victims millions of dollars in ransom payments made to criminals who have illegally encrypted valuable files. The worst offenders remain at large including a who may be behind Cryptowall 3.0 and have made some US$325 million this year according to the Cyber Threat Alliance, dwarfing FBI June figures which alone in about a year. Malware means no ransom has to be paid The recently spotted e is very disruptive, but the good news is that the malware makers have made a mistake that allowed Bitdefender researchers to recover the AES encryption key without having to decrypt it with the RSA private key held by the criminals.
Linux Encoder, like most crypto-ransomware, encrypts the files with the AES encryption algorithm, which uses the same key for both encryption and decryption, and is generated on the target's computer. This key is sent to the attacker's server, and is then encrypted with the RSA encryption algorithm, which creates a public key (for encryption) and the private one (for decryption).
Only the public key is sent to the victim PC. Microsoft today pushed out 12 bulletins as part of November’s Patch Tuesday, including four critical updates, all of which can lead to remote code execution.
Is rounded out by fixes for Windows, Lync,.NET, and Skype for Business, but there are two critical fixes that affect browsers on practically every build of Windows, Internet Explorer and Edge. The is marked critical for any users running versions of IE 7 to IE 11 and fixes 25 different vulnerabilities, mostly memory corruption bugs that can lead to code execution, in the browser. Assuming an attacker could get a user to view a specially crafted website, they could exploit the vulnerabilities and gain the same rights as the user. Continued: See.
Limit your account A new email phishing campaign is targeting businesses and consumers who have Apple IDs, trying to get them to enter their Apple login credentials, personal and credit card information into a site that mimics that of the popular tech company, the Comodo Antispam Labs team warns. The fake email looks threatens with 'limitations' on the victims' Apple account if they don't provide the needed information: The email is sent from from [email protected], and the link included in it currently leads to a fake login page located at Continued: Comodo Antispam Labs warning.