Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Obrela Digital Universe Report Reveals Most Common Cyber Security Attacks, And Sectors Most Affected

Ransomware attacks increasingly targeting critical infrastructure, the financial sector, healthcare and educational institutions. Less-protected third-party partners with privileged access increasingly targeted.

Building Trust and Engagement: Mobile App Security for the Modern User

In today's fast-paced digital world, the focus is on creating secure and frictionless mobile applications that prioritize user privacy. This balance is particularly critical when dealing with in-app subscription management, a key revenue source and a hot spot for user data interaction. Proper management of these subscriptions is crucial for both securing continuous revenue and ensuring user trust alongside compliance with strict data protection standards.

Detecting and Preventing Reconnaissance Attacks

In 2024, every business across the world is already aware of the looming potential of a cyber attack. With billions of dollars pouring into the cyber criminal market each year, hackers have more backing to create large-scale attacks, breaching financial records, private data, and customer information. Reconnaissance attacks are the first step in many of these major breaches. By scouting out a business, collecting information about its security posture, and aiming to identify vulnerabilities, these initial attacks give hackers the data they need to launch precise, damaging attacks.

Top Security Data Types: Exploring the OCSF Framework

In cybersecurity, it’s a big challenge to handle diverse data formats across various platforms. The Open Cybersecurity Schema Framework (OCSF) aims to address this by standardizing data security formats and simplifying the process of threat hunting. Major players like IBM, AWS and others are working together to standardize data with this open-source project, emphasizing its importance.

Paris Olympic Games wins cybersecurity silver - how does your attack surface compare?

Using our own proprietary External Attack Surface Management (EASM) solution, Outpost24’s Sweepatic, we have conducted an attack surface analysis on the Paris 2024 Olympic Games online infrastructure. The Paris 2024 cybersecurity team have done plenty right, but we’ve also highlighted some real-life attack surface risks that have slipped through the gaps (and do so for many organizations) including open ports, SSL misconfigurations, cookie consent violations, and domain squatting.

Automating detection and response with Tines workflows and Sysdig

Sysdig and Tines have joined forces to provide an integrated detect, triage and respond solution that enhances cloud security. This partnership combines Sysdig’s expertise in Runtime Insights with Tines’ robust orchestration and automation features. The result is a powerful solution that enables DevSecOps, Operations, and SOC teams to streamline security workflows, shorten response times, and stay ahead of security incidents.

5 pre-built workflows created and shared by Tines users

At Tines, we're super proud of our library. Featuring hundreds of pre-built workflows, it's an incredibly useful source of inspiration for Tines users, from newbies right up to advanced builders. This week, the library reached two major milestones - it now contains 750 pre-built workflows, 75 of which were submitted by Tines users.

Business Email Compromise (BEC): Types & How To Prevent

Many of us think we’re too smart to get scammed by fake company emails. We also believe our biggest cybersecurity threats will be more complex than they have been in the past, and that today’s scammers and phishers will only target government and financial institutions with cutting-edge hacking and infiltration techniques. Regrettably, the threat of seemingly simple business email compromise (BEC) attacks is as prevalent as ever.

24 Real Examples of Business Email Compromise (BEC)

The FBI has named Business Email Compromise (BEC) a $26 billion scam, and the threat is only increasing. Business email compromise (BEC) is a type of cybercrime in which a threat actor uses an email information-seeking scam to target a business to defraud the entire organization. Using social engineering techniques, BEC often occurs over fraudulent emails.