Linux Security Week: March 12th, 2018
LinuxSecurity.com Feature Extras:
- Social engineering is the practice of learning and obtaining valuable information by exploiting human vulnerabilities. It is an art of deception that is considered to be vital for a penetration tester when there is a lack of information about the target that can be exploited.
- When you’re dealing with a security incident it’s essential you – and the rest of your team – not only have the skills they need to comprehensively deal with an issue, but also have a framework to support them as they approach it. This framework means they can focus purely on what they need to do, following a process that removes any vulnerabilities and threats in a proper way – so everyone who depends upon the software you protect can be confident that it’s secure and functioning properly.
A Sneak Peek at the New NIST Cybersecurity Framework (Mar 5) | ||
|
||
Web Application Firewalls: Choosing the Right WAF for Server Security (Mar 5) | ||
|
||
Chrome 65 rolls out: You're getting a stronger redirect blocker, 45 security fixes (Mar 7) | ||
|
||
(Mar 6) | ||
|
||
6 Questions to Ask Your Cloud Provider Right Now (Mar 6) | ||
|
||
(Mar 8) | ||
|
||
UK Cops Tried ‘DDoS-Style' Tactics on Drug Dealers' Phones (Mar 6) | ||
|
||
(Mar 8) | ||
|
||
Hacking operation uses malicious Word documents to target aid organisations (Mar 5) | ||
|
||
Open-source Exim remote attack bug: 400,000 servers still vulnerable, patch now (Mar 7) | ||
|
||
(Mar 9) | ||
|
||
Homeland Security's IT security continues to fall short (Mar 9) | ||
|