Seriously Risky Business
Srsly Risky Biz: Tuesday, March 9
Web shells everywhere, Russian cybercrime forums hacked, and a little airline loyalty data can go a long way
Brett Winterford is the founding editor of the Seriously Risky Business Newsletter and worked for Risky Business Media from 2020 to 2021.
Seriously Risky Business
Web shells everywhere, Russian cybercrime forums hacked, and a little airline loyalty data can go a long way
Seriously Risky Business
Mandatory intel sharing won't cure Holiday Bear woes, US Government caught up in Accellion mess, China and India take their beef online
Seriously Risky Business
Accellion customers are getting ransom notices, EGregor affiliates busted, French industry targeted by Sandworm crew and more.
Seriously Risky Business
Hackers attempt to poison American town's water supply, Consensus forming on hound release, SolarWinds still hunting for SVR's initial access
Seriously Risky Business
Accellion appliances are being thrown out the nearest window, World v Emotet: Fight!, Ransomware spoils funnelled through very few parties
Seriously Risky Business
SonicWall's dog food bites, Accellion has questions to answer, and more hard security lessons from HAND-WAVY RUSSIASTUFF
Seriously Risky Business
Idiot-fuel: hackers post COVID-19 vaccine docs online, The SolarWinds thing isn't really a SolarWinds thing, No free pass for MacOS apps
Seriously Risky Business
JetBrains stories generate heat, shed little light, Mozilla tries to outfox censors, It's been real, Donald Trump
Seriously Risky Business
SolarWinds hacking was stellar, British court rejects US request to extradite Assange, Judge dismisses first of Apple's claims against Corellium
Seriously Risky Business
WeChat censors Australia's Prime Minister, Russian bears all up in your VMwares, US Government to get National Cyber Director
Seriously Risky Business
Ransom payouts spell trouble for insurers, Plenty of heart - and a hole - in NYT ransomware story, A snap cyber audit for Australia's banks
Seriously Risky Business
UK military to attack cyber-enabled crime, The malware families that usually lead to ransomware, Congress leans on US Government buying power to clean up IoT security