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Vendor reports note huge volume of attacks on local and public infrastructure, such as: CrowdStrike: Monitored hacktivist and nation-state distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks related to the Israli-Palestinian conflict, including against a US airport. 50,000 DDoS attacks on public domain name service (DNS) resolvers.
Most of us don’t have responsibility for airports, but thinking about airport security can teach us lessons about how we consider, design and execute IT security in our enterprise. They cooperate with airlines, retailers and government agencies, and their threats can be catastrophic. And this is just the start.
Victimology In this section, we used data consensually provided by our users and information about victims from open sources, such as other security vendors’ reports and the data leak site of the ransomware gang itself. Triple extortion: adding a threat to expose the victim’s internal infrastructure to DDoS attacks.
For example, Disney offers a subscription-based access to movies through Disney+, pay-per-use access to movies through Amazon.com, and perpetual licenses when consumers buy DVDs from a retailer. Subscriptions and pay-per-use options allow a rights holder to specify strict limitations for use and offer lower prices than perpetual licenses.
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