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Danowski said that in 2013, i-SOON established a department for research on developing new APT network penetration methods. “The infosec industry is always trying to distinguish [the work] of one APT group from another. APT stands for Advanced Persistent Threat, a term that generally refers to state-sponsored hacking groups. .
Last year, two high severity, easily exploitable Microsoft Exchange vulnerabilities dubbed ProxyLogon and ProxyShell made waves in the infosec sphere. Both vulnerabilities impact Microsoft Exchange Server on-premises and hybrid setups running Exchange versions 2013, 2016, and 2019 with an internet-exposed Outlook Web App (OWA) component.
Enter Project 2030, a collaboration between Oxford Visiting Researcher Victoria Baines and Trend Micro Vice President of Security Research Rik Ferguson, which uses a mixture of survey data and forward-thinking understanding of technology to predict the infosec concerns a decade from now.
Aside from restructuring and generally updating the controls from the 2013 second edition, the committee (finally!) The newly-published third edition of ISO/IEC 27002 is a welcome update to the primary ISO27k controls catalogue (officially, a 'reference set of generic information security controls').
Wednesday 13th, March 2013, 10 years ago, Kali Linux v1.0 A fresh start in March 2013. Domain The team knew how much BackTrack was growing in popularity, and as they did not switch the project name when using Ubuntu, it was time to create its own place on the Internet. BackTrack Linux became Kali Linux in March 2013.
With more than 600K followers on YouTube, LiveOverflow is one of infosec’s first social media influencers. Robert Vamosi: Before there was the internet as we know it today, there were bulletin boards, BBSs. By anyone’s measure that would make him an infosec influencer, would it not? Massive numbers.
With more than 600K followers on YouTube, LiveOverflow is one of infosec’s first social media influencers. Robert Vamosi: Before there was the internet as we know it today, there were bulletin boards, BBSs. By anyone’s measure that would make him an infosec influencer, would it not? Massive numbers.
Vamosi: One sunny morning in 2013. Vamosi: Within InfoSec there's an informal use of AppSec as well. In 2013, we only knew that someone calling themselves Dread Pirate Roberts was running the site. However, on the internet, nothing is truly deleted. But I view internet privacy differently. And he found some.
Stok: In the early 90s, when everyone was just not having the internet, that's kind of where I started my journey. Fortunately I was covering security for ZDNet from day one, and eventually got pretty good at explaining infosec to others. Mind you, this was pre-internet as we know it today. No infosec Twitter or Discord.
Stok: In the early 90s, when everyone was just not having the internet, that's kind of where I started my journey. Fortunately I was covering security for ZDNet from day one, and eventually got pretty good at explaining infosec to others. Mind you, this was pre-internet as we know it today. No infosec Twitter or Discord.
Stok: In the early 90s, when everyone was just not having the internet, that's kind of where I started my journey. Fortunately I was covering security for ZDNet from day one, and eventually got pretty good at explaining infosec to others. Mind you, this was pre-internet as we know it today. No infosec Twitter or Discord.
PPP wanted to give their past high school selves the infosec education they didn’t have. Megan Kerns of Carnegie-Mellon University joins The Hacker Mind to talk about the early days and the continued evolution of this popular online infosec competition site. in InfoSec however, learning happens 365 days a year.
To answer these questions, Paul Roberts, Editor-in-Chief of the Security Ledger, has founded securepairs.org , a group of infosec experts who are volunteering their free time to fight for the digital right to repair in local legislation. Back then Paul was writing infosec stories for IDG and I was doing the same at ZDNet.
To answer these questions, Paul Roberts, Editor-in-Chief of the Security Ledger, has founded securepairs.org , a group of infosec experts who are volunteering their free time to fight for the digital right to repair in local legislation. Back then Paul was writing infosec stories for IDG and I was doing the same at ZDNet.
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