Resources

Blog

"Onion-Layered" Incidents Among Top Cybercrime Trends Observed by IBM

Security researchers with IBM have named "onion-layered" security incidents one of the top cybercrime trends they are observing in Q4 2015. In their report IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Quarterly, 4Q 2015, the researchers explain that an onion-layered security incident involves a second, more damaging and sophisticated attack that follows an...
Blog

Security Mentors: Honoring Those Who Fuel Our Love of Infosec

Thanksgiving is a time for reflection. It provides us with a space for acknowledging all those many people and life experiences that one way or another enrich our lives, year after year. With the spirit of Thanksgiving in mind, we have gathered together the comments of some of the industry's leading professionals on who they are thankful for fueling...
Blog

The Irony of Ethics in Malware

In the last few days, I have seen multiple articles on ransomware in my news feeds (including a shameless reference back to our own post on The State of Security). As I read these, it occurred to me that there is an ironic similarity between these schemes and legitimate companies. The criminals running these malware and ransomware schemes have to be...
Blog

Cloud Computing: Putting Your Files on Someone Else’s Computer

If your organization decides to put their corporate files – or their customers’ files – onto someone else’s computer, i.e., implement cloud computing, what security effort should those organizations undertake to ensure the safety of their data? That is the question that we find our customers looking to Tripwire to help them answer. As a Tripwire...
Blog

Phishing Email Scam Targeting DHL Customers

Security researchers have identified a new phishing email scam that is targeting customers of the DHL global delivery service. Analysts with the Comodo Antispam Labs team reveal in a blog post that the phishing email purports itself to be sent from DHL Worldwide and uses the subject line "DHL Shipping Delivery Tracking Number" to support this...
Blog

A LastPass Hack with a Happy Ending

In September, Black Hat Europe announced an interesting talk that entitled “Even the LastPass will be stolen, deal with it”. As reported in an earlier article, it was anticipated (based on the description on the conference announcement) that the “Remember Password” option was the likely attack vector. The presentation was delivered last week, and as...
Blog

Rethinking Effective Endpoint Threat Protection

Given the number and sophistication of threats stalking today's digital landscape, it is incumbent on organizations to improve their cyber resiliency. However, this task is not as easy as it sounds. Our network environments have evolved far beyond the confines of what antivirus solutions or firewalls alone can protect. The Internet of Things (IoT)...
Blog

Cloudsota Trojan Found Preinstalled on Tens of Thousands of Tablets

A security firm has discovered that tens of thousands of tablets sold on Amazon.com and elsewhere came pre-loaded with the Cloudsota Trojan. Chinese mobile Internet security company Cheetah Mobile has published a post about its findings. In it, it highlights the complaints of many customers regarding these tablets' poor quality of manufacture, with...
Blog

Ethics Meets Ransomware

It is rare that the good guys help criminals, but that is exactly what the folks at BleepingComputer.com have done. Let it be stated in no uncertain terms that they should be applauded and thanked for doing so. The problem, as reported on the BleepingComputer site, is that there is yet another variant of ransomware that is circulating online. This...
Blog

Are iPhones or Androids More of a Security Risk?

Blondes vs brunettes, Kirk or Picard, and the Oxford comma... these are some of the most burning issues that people just can't agree on. And another is whether iPhones are better than Android phones. Both sides have their fervent fans and supporters, and are capable of making convincing arguments to back their point of view. But now a new study ...
Blog

Tor: FBI Paid Carnegie Mellon $1 Million to Expose Users

According to the Tor Project, the FBI paid researchers at Carnegie Mellon University to launch an attack on the service last year in an effort to expose some of its users. The anonymizing service has written a blog post about its findings: "The Tor Project has learned more about last year's attack by Carnegie Mellon researchers on the hidden...
Blog

Security 101 for CEOs

There are important security lessons for CEOs following the embarrassing revelation that a teenager hacked into the personal email accounts of CIA Director John Brennan and Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson. This isn't the first nor will it be the last time that people hack into accounts using a variety of techniques; it illustrates the...
Blog

Three Men Indicted in 2014 JP Morgan Hack

On Tuesday, a federal court charged three men with having hacked JP Morgan Chase back in 2014, a breach that resulted in the theft of 83 million people's personal information. The 23-count indictment unsealed by the United States District Court Southern District of New York indicts three men--two Israeli citizens and an American citizen--on charges...
Blog

VERT Threat Alert: November 2015 Patch Tuesday Analysis

Today’s VERT Alert addresses 12 new Microsoft Security Bulletins. VERT is actively working on coverage for these bulletins in order to meet our 24-hour SLA and expects to ship ASPL-643 on Wednesday, November 11th. Ease of Use (published exploits) to Risk Table Automated Exploit Easy ...
Blog

TLS Extended Master Secret Extension: Fixing a Hole in TLS

Few Internet technologies are relied upon as heavily as TLS/SSL, yet it has been widely known for years that this fundamental security protocol does not do enough to effectively protect communications. The most visible failing of TLS is the reliance on public key infrastructure (PKI) in which every certification authority (CA) becomes a potential...
Blog

The Security Mindset: The Key to Success in the Security Field

What does it take to succeed as an information security professional? There are many paths to a successful infosec career, many top jobs in the industry, and many different types of people can excel in the field. Indeed, diversity is fundamental to good security. To be effective, security requires contributions from people of different backgrounds...
Blog

Searching The Deep Web and The Unmapped Internet

Some think it’s where sexual deviants access child pornography or where devoted drug users go to purchase their substance of choice; others see it quite differently as a marketplace completely void of personal information – the first of its kind. On the "deep web" lies the Silk Road. It’s an anonymous online market, a place few have visited. That...