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Criminals Demanded $8K from Sacramento Regional Transit after Attack

Criminals demanded a ransom of approximately $8,000 after they attacked the Sacramento Regional Transit's (SacRT) computer system. The attack occurred on 18 November, reports The Sacramento Bee, when unknown attackers defaced the public transportation agency's main website with the following message: I’m sorry to modify the home page, i’m good...
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Why 'Yes Persons' Make Change Control a Necessity for Your Company

Recently, my nine-year-old son informed me that he had observed over time how I always seem to help other people and how others always depend on me. I said to him that, in a way, he is much the same, as he is always saying 'yes' to doing little jobs. Together, we defined ourselves as being 'yes persons.' However, as our conversation evolved, I said...
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Securing the Entire Container Stack, Lifecycle and Pipeline – Part 1

With the rise in popularity of containers, development and DevOps paradigms are experiencing a massive shift while security admins are left struggling to figure out how to secure this new class of assets and the environments they reside in. While containers do increase the complexity of the ecosystem that security admins are responsible for securing...
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Australian Broadcasting Corporation Leaked Data through AWS S3 Bucket

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) leaked sensitive data online through a publicly accessibly Amazon Web Services (AWS) S3 bucket. Public search engine Censys indexed the misconfigured asset on 14 November during a regular security audit of the S3 environment. Researchers at the Kromtech security center don't know who might have accessed...
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Women in Information Security: Beth Cornils

Last time, I had fun talking with Victoria Walberg. She really understands cloud and IoT cybersecurity. This time, I got to speak to Beth Cornils. She has a pretty cool job that involves making IoT cars safe! Kim Crawley: Hi, Beth! Tell me about what you do. Beth Cornils: I am a product manager for an autonomous vehicle company. Prior to that, I was...
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What Is Vulnerability Management?

Enterprise networks regularly see change in their devices, software installations and file content. These modifications can create risk for the organization. Fortunately, companies can mitigate this risk by implementing foundational security controls. For example, enterprises can monitor their important files for change using file integrity...
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Scammers Steal S$80K from Woman Using Fake Police Website

Scammers stole S$80,000 from a woman by tricking her into visiting a fake phishing website for the Singapore Police Force (SPF). On 13 November, local law enforcement received a report from the woman that someone had stolen several thousand Singapore dollars from her bank account. She told investigators that the trouble started sometime earlier when...
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A Boeing 757 was hacked remotely while it sat on the runway

If you thought it was scary when security researchers remotely hijacked a Jeep as it was driven down the freeway, consider this - now airplanes are getting hacked. The US Department of Homeland Security has revealed that a Boeing 757 airliner was successfully hacked as it sat on the runway at the airport in Atlantic City, New Jersey on September 19,...
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Microsoft Fixes 17-Year-Old Arbitrary Code Execution Bug in Office Suite

Microsoft has patched a 17-year-old bug hidden in its Office suite that attackers can use to execute arbitrary code on vulnerable machines. The vulnerability resides in Microsoft Equation Editor (EQNEDT32.EXE). It's a component that allows users to insert and edit equations into Microsoft Word documents as an Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) item....
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Phishing Testing: Building Your Human Firewall

Phishing is becoming a major threat vector for organizations all around the world. Phishing is the exercise of sending illegitimate emails designed to elicit a response from the end user, whether that’s clicking on a link that infects them with malware or tricking the user into volunteering information that they normally would not provide like a...
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Blockchain 101: How This Emerging Technology Works

Unless you’ve been living in Slab City or off the grid for a while, you’ve probably heard this year’s omnipresent buzzword ‘blockchain.’ But perhaps you're a bit clueless as to what this newer technology entails. In a recent HSBC survey of 12,000 respondents in 11 countries, 80 percent of people could not explain how blockchain works. Don’t worry,...
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VERT Threat Alert: November 2017 Patch Tuesday Analysis

Today’s VERT Alert addresses the Microsoft November 2017 Security Updates. VERT is actively working on coverage for these vulnerabilities and expects to ship ASPL-752 on Wednesday, November 15th. In-The-Wild & Disclosed CVEs CVE-2017-8700 A Cross Origin Resource Sharing bypass could allow information disclosure in ASP.NET Core. Microsoft has...
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Cryptocurrency Miner among October's 10 Most Wanted Malware

A cryptocurrency miner has earned its place on a list of the top 10 most wanted malware for the month of October 2017. The browser-mining service in question goes by the name "CoinHive." It's a piece of JavaScript that site owners can embed into their websites. Whenever a user visits their domain thereafter, CoinHive will activate and begin mining...
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The Case of The Dark Web DDoS – Part 2

In part one of this two-part series, I described what we know about the September 14 attack against the drug sites on the Tor network. To review: The attack simultaneously took down 11 drug sites on the dark web, yet traffic patterns were unaffected. The site administrators indicated a problem on a public forum; and There was no discernible...
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Women in Information Security: Victoria Walberg

Last time, I spoke with Nitha Suresh. She's written IEEE papers and knows her stuff when it comes to pentesting and aircraft data networks. This time, I had the pleasure of interviewing Victoria Walberg. She has a lot of ideas when it comes to IoT and the cloud. Kimberly Crawley: Please tell me about what you do, Victoria. Victoria Walberg: I'm a...
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The Case of The Dark Web DDoS – Part 1

Think of all the recent DDoS attacks. They all seem to share the common trait of bad guys disrupting the normal flow of data against a legitimate business. Sometimes, these attacks are used for revenge, and other times, they are used for ransom. Sometimes, however, the bad guys become the targets. This is the story of an odd caper that played out on...