Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Brain Break from Fal.Con for Public Sector: Wizard Spider Threat Intel Highlight

Wizard Spider is a criminal group behind the core development and distribution of a sophisticated arsenal of criminal tools that allow them to run multiple different types of operations. This interview with Nina Padavil, Strategic Threat Advisor, CrowdStrike, and Robert Bruno, Commercial Illustrator, will highlight Wizard Spider’s targets, tactics and motivations. You don't have a malware problem, you have an adversary problem – stay ahead of the adversaries and learn more at the Adversary Universe.

Hacker-Powered Security

This episode is a deep dive into how startups can leverage the power of crowd sourced hackers to find bugs and security issues in your apps. Ben Sadeghipour has over 685 vulnerabilities found in major sites such as Snapchat, AirBnB and even the U.S. Department of Defense, Hacker One helps companies by providing tools to help with response assessments and running their bug bounty programs.

What is the NYDFS Cybersecurity Regulation? (23 NYCRR 500)

The NYDFS Cybersecurity Regulation (23 NYCRR 500) is a set of regulations from the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) that places cybersecurity requirements on all Covered Entities (financial institutions and financial services companies). It includes 23 sections outlining requirements for developing and implementing an effective cybersecurity program, requiring Covered Entities to assess their cybersecurity risk and develop a plan to proactively address them.

What is SIEM?

​​In an age of big data and connected devices, security information and event management (SIEM) is one of the key priorities for businesses of all sizes. At a time when data is everywhere, and cyber threats are growing, security information and event management is more important than ever. This is where information management meets security as companies seek to manage their incident response, compliance requirements, security, and analytics.

Privacy in Q2: In Like a Lion, Out Like a ... Lion

For a while, privacy in Q2 was looking like it would follow the season’s idiomatic rule: in like a lion, out like a lamb. But it came roaring back in June with a new U.S. state law, EU adequacy decisions, a new EU data transfer mechanism, and more. As we look back over the second quarter of 2021, several important developments are worth noting.

T-Mobile data breach exposes 50 million customers' data

Hackers have gained access to the personal data of 50m T-Mobile customers. Cybercriminals are reportedly offering access to some of the data in return for a fee of 6 bitcoin, or $270,000. The cause of the breach is unclear, but this follows a string of breaches for T-Mobile in recent years, after an incident in December 2020 that leaked the call records of around 200,000 customers.