Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

How to configure Self-service privilege elevation for Linux devices | ManageEngine PAM360

ManageEngine PAM360 is an enterprise-grade unified privileged access management solution that offers strict governance of privileged users, credentials, digital entities, and other shared sensitive information.

How to set up and use SSH Command Control | ManageEngine PAM360

ManageEngine PAM360 is an enterprise-grade unified privileged access management solution that offers strict governance of privileged users, credentials, digital entities, and other shared sensitive information. Through PAM360’s SSH command control (aka filtering) capabilities, IT administrators can create allowed command lists for critical Linux devices and allow only those pre-approved commands to be executed when an SSH connection is made to a device.

Mend SAST Administration - User Interface Walkthrough

Mend SAST is a SAST (Static Application Security Testing) solution for performing deep and extensive security analysis of application source code. Mend SAST is easy to use, requires almost no user input, and can be deployed during or after development with easy integration into a DevOps environment and CI/CD pipeline. The solution provides an excellent way to automate code inspection as an alternative to the demanding and time-consuming procedure of manual code reviews. Mend SAST supports all major languages and their frameworks, from Android Java to Xamarin C#.

Hello CISO - Episode 10: The CISO Regulation Minefield

You can’t undertake every compliance initiative under the sun, so how do you prioritize? Talk to the right people, understand the ripple effects of each initiative, and know which will harm and which will strengthen security. Hello CISO is a collaboration between Troy Hunt and the people who build the world's most trusted enterprise password manager.

Coffee with Jim - Securing Against Supply Chain Cyber Attacks

Following the ransomware attack on US IT firm Kaseya, join us for a chat about the ever-increasing need to secure ourselves successfully against not only direct ransomware attacks, but those that affect us through our supply chains. An estimated 200+ firms have been crippled by the attack on Kaseya, simply because they use Kaseya’s software. The implication of this is that it can feasibly happen to any aspect of your supply chain, so if cyber security is not high on your board’s list of priorities, it really should be. How could the attack on Kaseya, and other supply chain attacks, have been avoided? How can you reduce the probability of it happening to your own organisation? And crucially, how can you make the solution cost effective?