Thank you for reading our Linux Security Week newsletter! In this weekly newsletter, we strive to provide readers with a comprehensive overview of the week's most relevant open source security news. We want to provide you with the type of content you are interested in, and would love to hear your thoughts on this week's articles.
Today’s newsletter highlights our two most recent feature articles: Secure Linux Hosting for Businesses and What Is Threat Intelligence? We also examine various topics including how the Necro Python bot is evading traditional security detection by morphing and a new survey revealing how enterprises handle the security concerns of vulnerability detection and patch management. Happy Monday - and happy reading!
Yours in Open Source,
LinuxSecurity.com Feature Extras:
Secure Linux Hosting for Businesses - Linux prevails as the most popular OS among hosting providers - and for good reason. Linux is secure by design , cost-efficient, compatible with the majority of key programming languages used worldwide and offers high levels of customization.
What Is Threat Intelligence? - Threat intelligence (or threat intell) is information used to understand past, present, and future threats targeting an organization. It is evidence-based knowledge about a previous, existing or emerging threat to organizational assets.
How a malicious bot tries to evade detection by morphing (Jun 7) | ||
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Everything You Need to Know About Using Tor Browser on Linux (Jun 7) | ||
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As Linux Foundation's Zephyr Project Turns Five, Addressing Constrained Device Challenges is More Important Than Ever (Jun 8) | ||
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Kali Linux 2021.2 Released for Ethical Hackers with New Tools, Raspberry Pi Improvements (Jun 8) | ||
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MX Linux: A Great Linux Distro Designed with the User in Mind (Jun 9) | ||
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Ring Changed How Police Request Door Camera Footage: What it Means and Doesn’t Mean (Jun 10) | ||
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Vulnerability Detection and Patching: A Survey Of The Enterprise Environment (Jun 9) | ||
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Linux system service bug lets you get root on most modern distros (Jun 11) | ||
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Google fixes sixth Chrome zero-day exploited in the wild this year (Jun 10) | ||
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