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Security

CIFS vs. SMB: What's the Difference?

CIFS and SMB are both Windows file-sharing protocols used in storage systems, such as network-attached systems (NAS). The key difference between CIFS and SMB is that CIFS is a dialect of SMB – a particular implementation of the SMB protocol. The CIFS protocol is now considered an outdated SMB dialect, with the newer SMB 2.0 and SMB 3.0 addressing many of the inefficiencies of CIFS.

Cybersecurity and Drones: How to Address the Security Threats

The Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) industry has become a massive technological playground worldwide. Their extensive applications make UAS very popular for the public and the private sector. Armed forces, agricultural industry, law enforcement, meteorological agencies, medical services, environmental companies, and oil refineries are but a few out of the excessive list of UAS users.

Analyzing the PwnKit local privilege escalation exploit

What do Linux vulnerabilities and natural disasters have in common? Something seemingly dormant can suddenly spring to life, exposing activity beneath the surface. Several days ago, a security researcher published a high-severity vulnerability named PwnKit that impacts most major Linux distributions. The scary part? It’s existed since May of 2009. Polkit is a component for controlling privileges in Unix-like operating systems and is included by default on most major Linux distributions.

Critical Capabilities for Mobile Vulnerability Management

As organizations enable employees to work remotely, mobile devices and wireless networks will be key tools for maintaining communication and remaining productive. Allowing employees to work productively from any device and any location can open users to the risks that come with the shared nature of a mobile device. When your employees work from a personal device with access to corporate data, the device's health must be taken into account. It must be assessed for compliance with corporate security and risk policies.

Using event correlation and AI for Threat Detection and Incident Response

According to Cybersecurity Ventures, cybercrime will cost the world $10.5 trillion annually by 2025. However, it is alarming how many companies are unaware of the aftermath of being attacked. A successful attack can cause irreversible damage to companies’ finances. This is because attacks include money theft, damage, and destruction of data, interruption in services, decreased productivity, theft of intellectual property, theft of personal and financial data, reputational harm, and others.

How a Dark Web Monitoring Can Save Your Organization

Organizations often have their confidential information illicitly for sale on the darknets, but they don’t know it. Statistically, over 75% of compromised credentials are reported to the victim organization by law enforcement when it has become too late. That’s why dark web monitoring tools providers are the appropriate solution to help you know on time when your credentials are stolen and exposed on the dark web.

Featured Post

Experts offer advice for Data Protection and Privacy Day 2022

Data Protection Day as it's marked across Europe, or Data Privacy Day, internationally, is an annual marker in a very challenging cybersecurity challenging calendar. Consumer data is regularly stolen, and enterprises and public sector organisations are often in the headlines because of incessant attacks from cybercriminals as well as from accidental privacy misadventures.

Five worthy reads: Into the metaverse

Five worthy reads is a regular column on five noteworthy items we’ve discovered while researching trending and timeless topics. This week we will explore the concept of the metaverse and what it holds for the future of technology and user experience. Illustration by Dorathe Victor When Facebook changed its name to Meta in September 2021, a new buzzword took over the tech world: the metaverse.