Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Emotet is Back in the Game

Known to be one of the most useful popular and dangerous threats, Emotet, firstly seen in 2014, is a Malware-as-a-Service (MaaS), that used to operate as a banking trojan targeting banks in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Since 2017, Emotet has done a shift into a loader and took parts in campaigns, setting up for Trickbot delivery, deployment of ransomware such as Conti and Ryuk, and other malwares such as QuakBot, Azorult, SilentNight and more.

The New "Attack Surface" - Securing the Business Beyond Conventional Boundaries

In 2020, just under half the UK workforce worked from home at least some of the time, according to the Office of National Statistics. In the United States, a survey by Upwork found that over a quarter of professionals expect to work fully remotely within the next five years. Working from home has been propelled into the mainstream by the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the resulting lockdowns and restrictions on traveling to work.

Unified Agent - WhiteSource CLI

This is the fourth video in a series describing how the WhiteSource Unified agent can be used to detect open source artifacts and their known vulnerabilities and licensing risks. This video will focus on performing a scan with the WhiteSource CLI which is a lightweight version of the unified agent that is designed for immediate feedback on a user's desktop.

Log4j detecting an attack and compromise in logs

Over the last two weeks, many have had flashbacks to 2012 when Heartbleed was released and everyone scrambled to fix broadly used OpenSSL. Due to their nature, some applications and services are so prolific that when a vulnerability is identified it causes massive issues for vendors and customers alike. The latest of this kind of issue is the Log4j vulnerability that has been dominating the press.