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System acquisition and development in NIS2: Suggested best practices

Get tips on securely acquiring and developing systems with a focus on ISO 27001, helping meet NIS2 requirements. Post explains key aspects like secure coding, acquiring secure applications and testing or publishing changes in a controlled manner.

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16.4.2024

Continuity management in NIS2: Benchmark measures for business continuity and backups with ISO 27001

This post offers insight on complying with NIS2's continuity and backup requirements using ISO 27001's best practices. It guides you through continuity planning, backup processes, challenges, and achieving compliance effectively.

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12.4.2024

HR security in NIS2: Best practices for compliance

Discover how the crucial role of HR in information security not only shapes the corporate security culture, but also steers the organization towards ISO 27001 and NIS2 compliance, ensuring secure handling of information assets and much more.

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5.4.2024

Access control & MFA in NIS2: Build a solid foundation with ISO 27001 controls

What are the requirements for access control and MFA in NIS2 and ISO 27001 and how can they be implemented successfully? Learn more about the controls, requirements, best practices and how to overcome potential challenges in this blog post.

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4.4.2024

Potential Struggles IT Companies might Encounter with Incident Identification and Reporting Today

The complexities of incident identification and reporting in IT, touching on coordination problems, tool inadequacies, and process deficiencies. It explores modern challenges like cyber threats and alert fatigue, as well as the cognitive gap.

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28.3.2024

Information Security Risk Management: A Step-by-step Guide to a Clear Process

This post offers a comprehensive guide on managing information security risks, from pre-steps like asset identification to evaluation, treatment and monitoring. A crucial aspect given the surge of cyber vulnerabilities amid increasing tech advances.

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21.3.2024

Ransomware, AI Act 101, NIST CSF 2.0: Cyberday product and news round up 3/2024 🛡️

In the March digest, development themes include new frameworks, risk management improvements and a new visual view for documentation cards. The news features Information Security Trailblazers, data breaches and AI Act 101.

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21.3.2024

Empowering Employees: The Keystone in Incident Detection and Reporting

Employees are vital for detecting and reporting cyber threats and bolstering security. Proper training fosters a resilient culture, ensuring timely responses and safeguarding against breaches.

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15.3.2024

Shadow IT accounts with weak passwords endanger organizations

63% of enterprise professionals have created at least one account without their IT department being aware of it, and two-thirds of those have created two or more, the results of a recent 1Password survey have revealed. Even more worryingly, only 2.6% of these 63% use a unique password when they create a new shadow IT account at work and just 13% use a password generator – the rest re-use a memorable password or use a … More → The post Shadow IT accounts with weak passwords endanger organizations appeared first on Help Net Security.

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15.5.2020
Password Attacks

Data Breach Impacts Thousands of Fort Worth Water Customers

About 3,000 Fort Worth residents who used credit cards to pay their water bills online may have had their personal information stolen, the water department says.A city contractor, CentralSquare, determined that someone hacked into the software used to process credit card information, water department spokeswoman Mary Gugliuzza said Thursday.The customers whose data may have been stolen are being notified, she said.The stolen information may include names, addresses and credit card data, including numbers and security codes and affects customers who made online payments between Aug. 27 and Oct. 23, she said.CentralSquare is offering impacted customers free credit monitoring for one year.Customers who had set up recurring payments by credit cards were not affected by the breach unless they changed credit card numbers online between August and October, Gugliuzza said.Customers who paid by bank draft, by phone or in person also were not impacted.

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15.5.2020
Supply Chain Attacks

Dexphot Malware Hijacked 80K+ Devices to Mine Cryptocurrency

A cryptomining malware has infected at least 80k devices and uses various tactics to evade detection.

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15.5.2020
Malware

7 types of virus – a short glossary of contemporary cyberbadness

Here's a short list of 7 malware categories we hope you never encounter. Sadly, it's not an exhaustive list... but it's a helpful start.

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15.5.2020
Malware

Over half a million Zoom accounts being sold on hacker forum

By Sudais Asif A hacker is selling 500,000 zoom account credentials on the dark web and an infamous hacker forum putting the privacy of users at risk. This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: Over half a million Zoom accounts being sold on hacker forum

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15.5.2020
Phishing

How to identify phishing emails and what to do

Note:This blog was written by an independent guest blogger. Phishing scams remain one of the most widespread cybercrimes. A phishing scam can be as simple as getting someone to click on a link, attachment, or a picture of cute kittens. I recently received a spam email with the message: “Old friends post embarrassing pictures of Jason Nelson online; click here to see.” Seeing my name in the body or subject line of an email is alarming. That is why scammers word these emails this way. They want to alarm you, and in your rush to defend yourself, click the link to see the pictures. Similar to extortion emails that claim to have videos of “compromising” situations or screen recordings of users on adult websites. These emails work on our fear of embarrassment, rejection, or ruin to get us to let down our guard. Do not click on anything in these emails. Delete, Delete, DELETE. But, it does beg the question, where do these emails come from, who is sending them? In this article, we will be looking at the phishing phenomenon and what options we have to defend ourselves. According to a 2018 report from statistics website Statista, at 11.69%, the majority of spam emails originated in China. But before we in the U.S. pat ourselves on the back, the second-largest amount of spam emails came from the United States at 9.04%. Since 2018, many of these scams demand some form of a cryptocurrency payment. In an October 8, 2019 report, the cybersecurity company Cofense said that phishing scams are changing their tactics and moving from Bitcoin to one of the so-called altcoins like Litecoin or Monero. So how do these scammers get our emails? One way and most likely is lax security protocols or a data breach at a service or email provider. HaveIbeenPwned is a website that can help you see if your email is on a compromised site. But there are other ways as well, including email addresses sold to the highest bidder. A way to minimize our risk of phishing scams is to be mindful of and limit the websites we provide our emails. Also, use a password manager to create more complex passwords. BitWarden, 1Password, and Dashlane are good options. When deciding on an email address, avoid using your name and or some specific data. For example, janedoe1980@email.com - try to avoid using your actual name and actual year of birth or the last four of your social (for U.S. Citizens). There is no way to be 100% safe online, but at least we can make it that much harder for cybercriminals. So let’s look at some steps we can take to protect ourselves from phishing and scam emails: Check the sender address, even if the message seems legitimate, look at the sending address, if it looks odd, it’s probably spam. Does the email ask you to click on a link or attachment? Again check the sender address and the rest of the email for anything out of the ordinary. Did you receive the email out of the blue? A long lost relative is trying to send you money? Delete. Does the email contain several misspelled words? It could be a phishing email. Does the email contain some threat (embarrassment, prosecution for example) it’s more than likely a phishing scam. Lastly, if the email appears to be from someone you know or an organization you do business with, call that person (not from a number on the email) and verify they sent the email. Law Enforcement and the IRS are not known for sending threatening emails. Delete.       

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15.5.2020
Phishing

Targeted Phishing Attack Aims For Well-Known Corporate Brands

A targeted phishing attack using SLK attachments is underway against thirteen companies, with some of them being well-known brands, to gain access to their corporate networks.  [...]

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15.5.2020
Phishing

A Look at Cybersecurity in 2020 and Beyond

Data breaches and ransomware have hit many organizations in 2019 and expected to continue into 2020. What would an effective enterprise cyber security entail in 2020 and beyond?

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15.5.2020
CyberNow

Threat Vector Number 1

Britton White is a cybersecurity & HIPAA Compliance advisor. The following article is reproduced with his kind...

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15.5.2020
Phishing