Why should hate AI, When firmware attacks, The 300 second breach, Old ways still work, AI might help, And so begins the crawler wars, Turn off your SonicWall VPN, Your Pie may be wrapped in PII, Attackers will find a way, Signed kernel drivers, D-Link on the KEV, Rasperry PIs attack, Stealthy LoRa, LLM's don't commit code, people do, Jame's Bond st...
In the security news: Hacking washing machines, good clean fun!, Hacking cars via Bluetooth, More Bluetooth hacking with Breaktooth, Making old vulnerabilities great again: exploiting abandoned hardware, Clorox and Cognizant point fingers, AI generated Linux malware, Attacking Russian airports, When user verification data leaks, Turns out you CAN s...
SecurityWeek reports that LG Innotek has noted that it will no longer issue a fix for a recently discovered high-severity authentication bypass security issue impacting its already obsolete LNV5110R cameras.
Honeywell subsidiary Tridium's Niagara Framework has been impacted by over a dozen security flaws, which could be leveraged to facilitate significant compromise of building systems, according to Facilities Dive.
We chat with Material Security about protecting G Suite and MS365. How else are you monitoring the most commonly used cloud environments and applications? In the security news: Google Sues Badbox operators, Authenticated or Unauthenticated, big difference and my struggle to get LLMs to create exploits for me, Ring cameras that were not hacked, Mali...
Amazon-owned home security and smart home device manufacturer Ring has attributed the spike in unauthorized device logins worldwide in late May to a faulty backend update and not to a data breach, reports BleepingComputer.
The House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Protection was noted to be reevaluating the Stuxnet malware attack that paralyzed Iran's nuclear program in 2010 as part of a hearing next week that seeks to better understand cybersecurity threats faced by operational technology and critical infrastructure, reports CyberScoop.
Hackread reports that more than a million Android-based Internet of Things devices around the world have been infected with the BADBOX 2.0 botnet through bogus apps, nefarious downloads, or factory installation.
Fast Five
Selected by the SC Media Editorial team every Tuesday.
Sign up now for the top five issues cybersecurity pros need to know this week.