While cryptocurrencies have gone from red hot to full on meltdown in recent months, threat actors don’t show any signs of shying away from finding new and innovative ways to pursue this lucrative and relatively new financial category with increasingly complex and stealthy crypto-stealers.
Cyber Security
Cyber criminals, state-sponsored hackers and even the occasional disgruntled employee are constantly looking to gain unauthorized access for a variety of purposes: theft of money, cyber espionage, personal information for sale or for use in scams, and damage to critical infrastructure for just a few of the most common.
So how does an organization mitigate an entire world full of continual cyber attacks? Just as buildings have a number of necessary elements of physical security: access control, cameras, alarms and so on; there are similar key elements of cyber security that are absolutely vital for just about any modern business.
It starts with identifying and closing the most common doors that attackers use. For example, phishing attacks on employees are far and away the most common initial point of entry. The breach of even a low-level employee account can quickly turn into an escalation in access privileges and the ability to reach sensitive information. This is also true of smart devices, which are generally more poorly secured than computers and phones.
Twilio said that the data of 125 customers was accessed by the threat actors for some amount of time. Privacy messaging app Signal has indicated that the attackers had some level of access to about 1,900 registered phone numbers.
An organization’s information security traditionally fell to specific job titles. In some cases, this may be a simple IT administrator for many smaller organizations, while larger organizations may have a full dedicated team. Today’s new security structure leverages all levels of an organization.
Organizations must have effective defense against DDoS attacks and weaponization—not just for their own protection but also to limit the field for botnet recruitment and prevent service provider and corporate devices from being used in international cyber warfare.
As organizations increase their smartphone, laptop, tablet, and other mobile device usage, they're also increasing their risk across these thousands and sometimes hundreds of thousands of endpoints.
For organizations that grasp a vision of the future and begin to prepare for it now, vulnerability management will grow to be an integral part of their business risk management plan.
73% of organizations intensified software supply chain security efforts to address risks posed by open source code used by 80% of the companies, a Synopsys/ESG study found.
North Carolina and Florida have banned ransomware payments for government agencies. Pennsylvania, New York, Texas, Arizona and New Jersey have also had bills of this nature recently come up for consideration.
Businesses doing cross-border trade can benefit from following a set of best practices to understand the right markets to focus on, the unique elements of customer and fraudster behavior in those markets, and what customers expect from the online shopping experience.
Company confirmed that a five-year-old Slack bug leaked your hashed password to other group participants if you interacted with an invite-sharing feature.










