Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Mobile Security Best Practices for Law Firms

I write a lot about how organizations can secure their workers as they start using tablets and smartphones more for work. The truth is, the legal professional has been ahead of that curve for years. Even before smartphones were introduced over a decade ago, lawyers, paralegals and legal staff were already using cellphones to stay on top of case work. Now, with smartphones and tablets, your law firm’s staff can do everything they used to do in an office from wherever they go.

Be The Master of Your Encryption Keys

Over the past decade, we’ve seen a massive shift towards relying on cloud technologies for everything we do, from watching TV shows and movies to sharing photos. Organizations have done the same. To increase efficiency and availability, they have moved their data and workloads to the cloud. But in a world of expanding threats, it has become necessary to implement additional layers of security for cloud data, applications and services to ensure privacy remains a top priority.

Mobile interface make it easy scammers to phish you

With a smaller screen, developers are forced to create simplified interfaces on your tablets and smartphones. But this also makes it easy for scammers to hide telltale signs of a phishing link. Aaron Cockerill and Mike Banic of Lookout talks about why we're more vulnerable to phishing when using a mobile device.

What SolarWinds teaches us about Zero Trust for mobile endpoints

On December 17, CISA released an alert about an advanced persistent threat (APT) that compromised a number of U.S. government agencies, U.S. technology and accounting companies, and at least one hospital and one university. The cyberattack was executed by injecting malware into a software update from network management software company SolarWinds, which has over 18,000 customers.

Lookout Discovers New Spyware Used by Sextortionists to Blackmail iOS and Android Users

Threat researchers Apurva Kumar and Justin Albrecht go through the Lookout threat research team’s latest discovery, Goontact. The malware, which we have named Goontact, targets users of illicit sites, typically offering escort services, and steals personal information from their mobile device. You can also follow the team’s work at twitter.com/lookoutthreats