Ransomware operations have become expert at finding ways to make a victim pay. But experts say there are multiple steps healthcare sector entities in particular can take to better protect themselves and ensure that they can quickly restore systems and never have to consider paying a ransom.
To get zero trust strategy right, it is important to know what exactly to protect and decide what your crown jewels are. Three panelists discuss the various ways to do that and also offer their thoughts on whether zero trust is need for everything.
Speaking at the company's annual conference, Palo Alto Networks CEO Nikesh Arora urged the industry to move away from the alert triage model popularized by SIEM. SIEM tools have for decades highlighted alerts for SOC analysts to focus on, but the most important ones are getting ignored, he warns.
The many alleged failures of former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried fell into relief Tuesday amid a welter of unsealed criminal and civil prosecutions and damning congressional testimony by his successor. The day ended with Bankman-Fried ordered to remain in a Bahamas jail pending an extradition.
Assets kept behind air-gapped networks should be inaccessible, but researchers from Pentera describe how hackers use the DNS protocol as a command-and-control channel. To be truly safe, companies should isolate the DNS server used for air-gapped networks and filter traffic for anomalies.
U.S. federal authorities are warning healthcare providers, vendors and public health sector organizations of attacks involving LockBit 3.0 ransomware, which includes features of other ransomware variants, including BlackMatter, along with the threat of triple-extortion demands.
A ransomware attack on the Irish healthcare system in 2021 has cost the government 80 million euros in damages and counting. The Irish Health Service continues to notify victims of the incident that their personal information was illegally accessed and copied.
The security industry has traditionally tried to protect sensitive data by putting control points on endpoints or networks, but Skyhigh Security has taken a different approach. The company applies consistent policies around how data is treated across its ZTNA, SWG and CASB offerings.
Ngrok has closed a $50 million Series A round to provide enterprise-grade authentication and user and session observability without adding complexity for developers or users. Ngrok will use the proceeds to support additional authentication protocols and build out integrations and connections.
The founder of bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX, Sam Bankman-Fried, has been arrested by police in the Bahamas, the day before he was due to remotely testify before Congress. Bahamian officials say he faces a "likely" extradition request from the U.S., which has filed charges against him.
Snyk hauled in nearly $200 million just weeks after laying off 198 employees but had to slash its valuation by $1.1 billion to seal the deal. The company intends to use the Series G proceeds to enhance and expand its developer security platform through both organic investments and acquisitions.
Ride-hailing app maker Uber says a data breach at a third party is responsible for the appearance on a hacking forum of internal data. The data is unrelated to the September incident Uber experienced after a hacker affiliated with Lapsus$ penetrated the company network, an Uber spokesperson says.
Updated guidance from the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Health and Human Services aims to help clarify for mobile health app developers creating apps that process health data the privacy and security regulations that apply to their products.
Months after a global law enforcement team took down the world's largest darknet marketplace, a dozen others have taken its place. The new platforms operate in the Russian language, bring in more volume than the very profitable Hydra, and run operations differently from their Western counterparts.
Chicago-based hospital chain CommonSpirit reported to federal regulators that its October ransomware incident affected the protected health information of nearly 624,000 individuals. Among the information compromised were names, addresses, phone numbers and birthdates.
Our website uses cookies. Cookies enable us to provide the best experience possible and help us understand how visitors use our website. By browsing inforisktoday.co.uk, you agree to our use of cookies.