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Women in Information Security: Tiffany Gerstmar

Last time, I spoke with Stephanie Vanroelen. She's an OWASP contributor who specializes in web penetration testing. She also organizes BruCON, Belgium's largest cybersecurity convention, and volunteers at CyberSKool, an information security camp for kids. This time, I have the pleasure of speaking with Tiffany Gerstmar. Working with the US Navy...
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5 Notable DDoS Attacks of 2017

We all know what a great year distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks had in 2016. In the last four months, the web registered two significant DDoS campaigns. The first targeted Brian Krebs at a peak size of 620 Gbps. The second struck Dyn and, in so doing, took down Twitter, Amazon, Spotify and other clients of the DNS provider's critical...
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How Employees Unknowingly Gamble with Your Data

Modern-day encryption is surprisingly effective. Take the gold standard: AES 256-bit encryption. It’s military-grade, trusted by governments and top security professionals worldwide. The encryption keys use so many number combinations that it’s virtually brute-force proof. In theory, someone might be able to crack it if they invented a supercomputer...
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How to Create And Maintain a More Secure Database

The damage done to a business's reputation and the long-term financial consequences of a data breach are never a concern that should be treated lightly. While extending an existing database into the cloud can allow users to access sensitive files and information with far greater ease, failing to address potential security concerns or underlying...
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"123456" Still Reigns Supreme on Worst Passwords List

"123456" has once again topped an annual list of the worst passwords created by users in North America and Western Europe. On 19 December, password management provider SplashData released the 2017 edition of its "Worst Passwords of the Year" list. The dataset comprises five million leaked passwords exposed by data security incidents over the course...
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Exploiting ROBOT like Mr. Robot

It was late Friday afternoon when the email arrived saying he’d won a free cruise. Philip quickly opened the email and clicked the link for more information, but there was nothing there. What he didn’t know is that this cruise offer actually came from a hacker and not Cruise Giveaways of America. This was no ordinary link, either. That link...
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Bitcoin Exchange Bids Adieu after Suffering Second Hack This Year

A Bitcoin exchange has announced it has filed for bankruptcy and will cease all operations after suffering its second hacking attack this year. On 19 December, South Korean exchange Youbit announced at 04:35 local time that bad actors had hacked its website and stolen 17 percent of its assets in the process. BBC News reports that the hackers didn't...
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Women in Information Security: Stephanie Vanroelen

Last time, I spoke with Jelena Milosevic. She's a nurse who discovered a huge security problem in her hospital and is now on a mission to educate people about improving medical cybersecurity. This time, I spoke with Stephanie Vanroelen. Not only is she an OWASP contributing web security specialist, but she also volunteers at a camp that teaches...
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Preventing Yet Another AWS S3 Storage Breach

It seems like everyday you see a new report about a massive data leak caused by someone accidentally exposing files stored in AWS S3 Buckets to everyone on the Internet. Many may remember Verizon’s infamous snafu that leaked data records for six million of their customers due to a misconfiguration in their S3 buckets. Since then, there have also...
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Monero Mining Software Found on Oil Transport Company's Systems

An oil transportation company discovered someone had installed Monero-mining software on its systems without its authorization. On 14 December, Vladimir Rushailo, vice president of the Russian state-owned transport monopoly Transneft, revealed that the company had found that one of its computers had automatically downloaded software designed to mine...
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Foundational Controls that Assure Integrity

We want more of the CIA Triad. No, this has nothing to do with the US government agency. It stands for “confidentiality, integrity, and availability.” What it alludes to is the idea of protecting access to privileged information (confidentiality), asserting that the information hasn’t been tampered with (integrity), and that the information can be...
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New "Triton" Attack Framework Targeting ICS Systems

A new attack framework known as "Triton" is targeting industrial control systems (ICS) in an attempt to cause operational disruption and/or physical consequences. FireEye recently detected an incident at a critical infrastructure organization in which an attacker gained access to a Distributed Control System (DCS) that allows human operators to...
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5 Holiday Scams to Look Out For

The media has been filled with news of identity theft, hacks, and other security woes as of late. In recent months, Uber was hacked, people had their financial information stolen by credit card skimmers, and one woman lost $59,000 to a fake police website. Such incidents cause people’s stomachs to churn. They wonder how to keep their data secure and...
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The Security Implications of Killing Net Neutrality

A first pass look at the issue of net neutrality might not immediately bring to mind concerns around cybersecurity, but we shouldn’t ignore the logical security implications of fundamentally reclassifying the Internet. Let’s level set a little bit, for net neutrality doesn’t appear to be a simple issue for most, but it’s actually not that...
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New Ransom-Based Email Scam Urges Recipients to Pay Up or Die

A new ransom-based email scam campaign is demanding that all recipients either meet the sender's demands and pay up or die. On 11 December, Spiceworks user Dave Lass shared the campaign with other members of the professional IT industry network. The scam doesn't waste any time in attempting to frighten the recipient. It begins with the subject line ...
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5 Key Updates to Version 1.1 Draft 2 of NIST’s Cybersecurity Framework

On 11 May 2017, President Donald Trump signed an executive order that provides guidance on strengthening the United States' digital security. The directive makes clear that each head of a U.S. federal agency or government department is ultimately responsible for managing their organization's risk. It also emphasizes their use of a specific document...