In-brief: In the latest Security Ledger podcast we talk about pending right to repair laws and their impact on the Internet of Things. Also: Facebook’s Internet Defense Prize went to a better method for spear phishing detection. We talk to a member of the winning team. And, Johannes Ullrich of The Internet Storm Center joins us to talk about a study he did to measure the frequency of attacks on a common IoT device: digital video recorders.
Search Results for "Mirai Botnet"
Episode 59: Are Schools and Colleges Dumping Student Data? Also: was Devil’s Ivy a Dud?
Security Ledger publisher and Editor in Chief Paul Roberts speaks to Leah Figueroa, a Texas-based researcher who warns that colleges and universities – maybe even K-12 school districts – regularly divulge reams of student data to whomever asks, some of it is so-called personally identifying information or PII. Also: Paul talks with Assaf Harel about the future of the “Devil’s Ivy” vulnerability in gSOAP. Will it lead to the next Mirai botnet? Finally, Ashwin Almad of Endgame talks about a new Forrester survey that finds companies struggling to find the people and tools to prevent hacks and data leaks.
Was the Devil’s Ivy Vulnerability a Dud? Don’t Count on It.
In-brief: The Devil’s Ivy vulnerability in the open source gSOAP library is widespread and supposedly trivial to exploit. So why, one month later, haven’t we seen any attacks? Is Devil’s Ivy a dud? ‘Don’t count on it,’ security experts tell us.
German Electronics Store Sued for Selling Un-Patchable Android Phones
In-brief: That’ll be $99, or $150 without the vulnerabilities! A lawsuit in Germany is trying to force stores to come clean about security holes in the products they sell to consumers.
With an Eye on IoT Security ARM buys Simulity for $15m
In-brief: ARM’s purchase of Simulity adds the ability to do over the air updates to embedded SIM chips and highlights ARM’s efforts to build out security and management at IoT scale.