In-brief: The U.S. should invest in equipment and talent to preserve legacy, analog infrastructure such as copper wire telecommunications networks and pneumatic pumps as a hedge against massively disruptive cyber attacks and other interruptions, two researchers with The MITRE Corporation argue in a recent opinion piece.
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Code Blue: 8k Vulnerabilities in Software to manage Cardiac Devices
Software used to remotely program implantable cardiac devices by a number of vendors is rife with exploitable software vulnerabilities that leave the devices vulnerable to attacks and compromise, according to a report by the firm Whitescope Inc.
The WannaCry Missing: Federal Systems, Consumers
In-brief: One week after the WannaCry ransomware knocked out hospitals in the UK and subway fare systems in Germany, the malware is as notable for who it didn’t affect for who it did. Among those spared WannaCry’s wrath: federal IT systems in the U.S. as well as consumers. But why?
WannaCry: What’s in a name? Confusion | Digital Guardian
In-brief: focusing on WannaCry, the ransomware delivered in last week’s attacks, misses the point. Organizations weren’t done in by the shoddy malware, but by a class-A offensive cyber weapon known as EternalBlue. Editor’s Note: this blog is cross posted from Digital Guardian’s Data Insider blog.
WannaCry Ransomworm and Trump Cyber EO
Security Ledger Editor in Chief Paul Roberts speaks with Sean Dillon, a senior security analyst at RiskSense who has analyzed exploits of key Windows security holes released by the group Shadow Brokers. Those exploits and tools have helped spread WannaCry, a ransomware program. Paul also talks with John Dickson, a Principal at the Denim group regarding President Trump’s Cyber Executive order.