Imagining a time without internet access at every point of life seems unimaginable now. The internet has been the greatest boon of the 21st century, and with wireless networking, man has progressed in leaps and bounds. It has ensured high efficiency, greater time management, increased productivity and lesser mess (no copper wires lying around). From homes to offices, students to working professionals, Wi-Fi is everyone’s go-to choice.
Last week Dark Reading released an enterprise application security survey which raised serious concerns by IT and security teams about the state of low-code/no-code applications. The survey exposed a deep lack of visibility, control and knowledge necessary to maintain the level of security maturity expected in the enterprise. In this blog post, we will look at concrete concerns raised by the survey, examine their root cause and offer recommendations on ways to address them today.
One of the most commonly used techniques is to dump credentials after gaining initial access. Adversaries will use one of many ways, but most commonly Mimikatz is used. Whether it be with PowerShell Invoke-Mimikatz, Cobalt Strike’s Mimikatz implementation, or a custom version. All of these methods have a commonality: targeting LSASS.
Introducing the newest member of the JFrog ecosystem team – Frogbot. This new git bot tool works for you by protecting your git projects, as they are being developed, from security vulnerabilities. Register for my talk “Bots to Protect your Source Code” swampUP 2022.
Working in a Security Operations Center (SOC) is like working in an emergency room on a weekend shift at 2 AM. The steady stream of new alerts screaming for attention and combined with the lack of enough trained personnel make it a miracle that it all seems to work through on a string and a prayer. The question is though, when will the luck run out?
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has issued special publications focused on improving Third-Party Risk Management (TPRM) and Supply Chain Risk Management (SCRM). The NIST Cyber Security Framework (NIST CSF) special publication has become a popular option for its unique applicability to all industries with critical infrastructures. NIST CSF isn’t a light read.