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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

NIS2 Incident Reporting Requirements and related ISO 27001 Best Practices

This post outlines NIS2 incident reporting and further describes ISO 27001 best practices, and their application in crafting successful incident reporting processes for your organization.

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8.3.2024

Top 7 information security standards, frameworks and laws explained

Many information security frameworks are available to help organizations build their own security plans. This article provides key information about some of the most popular information security frameworks.

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4.3.2024

ISO 27001 and NIS2: Understanding their Connection

Learn how the ISO 27001 and the NIS2 are "connected" and why they are brought up together pretty often. Understand their differences and synergy with the help of this blog post.

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1.3.2024

Guide to Incident Detection and Reporting: Prepared for the Worst

In this guide you'll learn to navigate the incident detection and reporting process, explore various mechanisms, understand reporting, documentation, and derive crucial lessons. We also glance at other ingredients for successful incident management.

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22.2.2024

NIS2 Overview: History, key contents and significance for top management

Get an overview of NIS2's main contents and understand how it makes top management clearly responsible for organization's information security efforts.

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16.2.2024

Malware and malicious insiders account for most government cybercrime costs

They have also resulted in a large growth in cybersecurity expenditure across the Australian government and other organisations.While this trend is not unique to this nation and cyber-based acts on government agencies across the globe are on the rise, Australia’s reliance on technology for the provision of government services means the effects of cybercrime on citizens have the potential to be incredibly far reaching.A recent study by Accenture and the Ponemon Institute found that cybercrime is increasing in numbers and in scope. The study, which surveyed 2647 security and IT executives across 355 global organisations, found that then average number of security breaches per government agency was 190 in 2018, well ahead of the 14 experienced, on average, by private sector companies.The study also found that for public sector organisations, the average cost of security breach rose 17 per cent in 2018 to an average of US$10.28 million per incident, up from US$9.38 million in 2017.

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15.5.2020
Insider Attacks

Quick look at a couple of current online scam campaigns, (Tue, Feb 25th)

Since I was exposed to three different online scam campaigns in the last three weeks, without having to go out and search for them, I thought that today might be a good time to take a look at how some of the current online scams work.

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15.5.2020
Phishing

Attackers Deliver Malware via Fake Website Certificate Errors

Cybercriminals are distributing malware using fake security certificate update requests displayed on previously compromised websites, attempting to infect potential victims with backdoors and Trojans using a malicious installer. [...]

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15.5.2020
Malware

University of Utah Health notifies patients of phishing attacks that began in January

The University of Utah Health is notifying patients whose protected health information was in some employees’ email...

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15.5.2020
Phishing

Pabbly Email Marketing Exposes 51.2 Million Records Online

Jeremiah Fowler reports: Email marketing is big business and many companies rely on emails to keep in contact with their...

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15.5.2020
Illegal Personal Data Processing

Beware of Amazon Prime Support Scams in Google Search Ads

A malicious ad campaign is underway in Google Search results that lead users to fake Amazon support sites and tech support scams. A security researcher reached out to BleepingComputer today about search keywords such as "amazon prime" and "amazon prime customer support" that leads to ads pretending to be Amazon Prime support. For example, in the image below simply searching for "amazon prime" resulted in a fake and shady-looking support ad hosted on sites.google.com. In addition to Amazon support scams, other ads discovered by the researcher were for the search keywords "my account" and "login" that lead to a variety of different tech support scams like the one below. Tech Support Scam ads in Google Search Clicking on these ads lead to tech support scams located on sites such as  sites.google.com, Azure, and other providers. Tech Support Scam via Google Ads Now many of you may look at these ads and wonder how anyone could fall for them.

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15.5.2020
Phishing

Hackers Are Breaking Directly Into Telecom Companies to Take Over Customer Phone Numbers

Hackers are now getting telecom employees to run software that lets the hackers directly reach into the internal systems of U.S. telecom companies to take over customer cell phone numbers, Motherboard has learned. Previously, these hackers have bribed telecom employees to perform SIM swaps or tricked workers to do so by impersonating legitimate customers over the phone or in person. But instead of targeting consumers, they're tricking telecom employees to install or activate RDP software, and then remotely reaching into the company's systems to SIM swap individuals. Once RDP is enabled, "They RDP into the store or call center [computer] [...] and mess around on the employees' computers including using tools," said Nicholas Ceraolo, an independent security researcher who first flagged the issue to Motherboard. Certain employees inside telecom companies have access to tools with the capability to 'port' someone's phone number from one SIM to another.

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15.5.2020
Malware

Why the Latest Marriott Breach Should Make Us "Stop and Think" About Security Behaviors

Marriott International has experienced their second data breach

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15.5.2020
Illegal Personal Data Processing

Microsoft’s case study: Emotet took down an entire network in just 8 days

Microsoft shared details of the Emotet attack suffered by an organization named Fabrikam in the Microsoft’s DART Case Report 002, where Fabrikam is a fake name the IT giant gave the victim.

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15.5.2020
Malware