Month: April 2019

MalwareBytesSecurity

A week in security (April 1 – 7)

Credit to Author: Malwarebytes Labs| Date: Mon, 08 Apr 2019 15:52:47 +0000

A roundup of cybersecurity news from April 1–7, including global data privacy laws, water plant cybersecurity, and the mysterious story of a 23-year-old woman’s visit to the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

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SecurityTrendMicro

Dallas Start-Ups: Pitch Us Your Ideas for a Smarter Connected World

Credit to Author: Trend Micro| Date: Mon, 08 Apr 2019 13:00:40 +0000

At Trend Micro we’ve spent the past three decades successfully solving problems for our customers. It’s helped us to become a leading provider of services to secure the connected world. But we’re not done there. We also want to find and learn from the technology innovators and problem-solvers of tomorrow. That’s why our venture arm,…

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ScadaICSSchneider

4 Reasons Cloud-Service and Colocation Providers are Switching to Renewable Energy

Credit to Author: John Powers| Date: Fri, 05 Apr 2019 15:00:00 +0000

The boom in corporate renewable energy purchasing has impacted every industry, but nowhere is leadership stronger than in the information technology sector. The largest and most innovative corporate purchasers inhabit… Read more »

The post 4 Reasons Cloud-Service and Colocation Providers are Switching to Renewable Energy appeared first on Schneider Electric Blog.

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ComputerWorldIndependent

Massive bank app security holes: You might want to go back to that money under the mattress tactic

Credit to Author: Evan Schuman| Date: Fri, 05 Apr 2019 10:24:00 -0700

A new report from a well-regarded payments consulting firm has found a lengthy list of security insanity while examining several major fintech company mobile apps. Although the very nature of apps that manage and move money would suggest presumably strong security, banks and their cohorts tend to adopt new technology slower than almost any other vertical, which puts them in a bad place when it comes to security.

My favorite finding from the Aite Group report: “Several mobile banking apps hard-coded private certificates and API keys into their apps. [Thieves] could exploit this by copying the private certificates to their computers and running any number of free password-cracking programs against them,” the report noted. “Should the [attackers] successfully crack the private key, they would be able to decrypt all communication between the back-end servers and mobile devices, among other things. The API keys allow an adversary to then begin targeting the [financial institution’s] API servers, gaining them access to data in the back-end databases. This allows [attackers] to authenticate the device with the back-end servers of that app, since this is what APIs use for authentication and authorization.”

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