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Insight

Chris Boyd Malwarebytes

It may have had a negative impact on the UK economy, but COVID-19 doesn’t appear to have dampened enthusiasm for Christmas shopping. More than 70 percent of consumers intend to spend at least as much on presents this year as they have in the past. But, while this may be good news for embattled retailers, it’s even better news for opportunistic cybercriminals. With lockdown measures forcing consumers online, ecommerce has never been so popular -...

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The ambition for a ‘made in Europe’ AI: the Why, the What and the How

The global race for Artificial Intelligence (AI) is on. The European Commission (EC) has developed an ambitious AI strategy and its implementation will require member states to join forces. Yet in the face of a pandemic, fractures among states have appeared to only be widening. What is at stake for Europe and how could it achieve a pole position?  What is at stake? While the international community hasn’t yet agreed a universal definition of the...

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Merry Song, analyst, Turnkey Consulting

Booking.com and Expedia recently made the headlines – and not because of the hotel deals they were offering as people eased out of lockdown.  Instead, it had been discovered that one of their software providers had not stored sensitive data correctly, running the risk that the details of millions of hotel customers could have been exposed. Around the same time, Ticketmaster UK was fined £1.25 million following a cyber attack in 2018 which flagged that...

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Author Photo

It’s fair to say that we have all been spending less time jumping onto Wi-Fi hotspots at cafes, hotels, airports or company guest networks, over the last sixth months. But as lockdown measures were eased, we saw more people looking for a change of scenery in coffee bars and pubs offering workspaces. Whether at home or out and about, Wi-Fi has become something we have come to rely on for work and pleasure, while mobile operators increasingly use ‘hand-over’ to...

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Why the power to neutralise the threat of ransomware lies within your network

Ransomware attacks are on the up. Due to low execution costs, high rates of return, as well as a low risk of being caught, ransomware has become the preferred method of attack for those operating illegally within the online space. In fact, research highlights a surge in the number of ransomware attacks against businesses. In the UK, for example, there was a 195% increase in reported incidents, which equated to an estimated 6.4m ransomware attacks...

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SASE: A beginner’s guide

In what now seems like a lifetime ago, in late summer 2019 Gartner first coined the phrase Secure Access Service Edge. Since then, “SASE”, as it is now more commonly referred, has generated the kind of hype the industry hasn’t witnessed since SD-WAN first emerged around 2014. The promise was simple enough: enable enterprises to realise all of the long-held (but never fully realised) benefits of moving applications and workloads to the cloud and maintaining...

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Is 2FA by SMS a bad idea?

Two-factor authentication is ubiquitous and it’s a really valuable tool to protect systems and data assets. But with increasing reliance on home working and remote access in the current pandemic, what mechanism should we choose? It’s very common these days for SMS messages to be used for two-factor authentication – many cloud service providers use this mechanism, government departments have adopted it, and it is also quite common in the banking industry. When shopping online...

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Why test data does not need to be protected

The title of this article might seem contradictory, but it is not as conflicting as you might think. Sure, we all know that the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) prescribes us to protect personal data, wherever it may be. Production, development, testing, QA, training environments – data is stored everywhere. Most people assume that all of this data needs protection at all times, but actually that is not the case. Test data, for example, doesn’t...

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Internet freedom in Asian countries: an analysis

Asia is a controversial region when it comes to civil liberties, in general, and Internet freedom, in particular. Even in countries like Japan and Singapore, which boast a high level of technological progress and mind-boggling Internet penetration rates, the web is an increasingly regulated environment. Residents of some Asian countries can be subject to severe penalties, including criminal prosecution, for expressing their views on social media and personal blogs. The same goes for news sites....

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code

New research by Zscaler, analyzing 6.6 billion security threats, has discovered a 260% increase in attacks during the first nine months of 2020. Among the encrypted attacks was an increase of the amount of ransomware by 500%, with the most prominent variants being FileCrypt/FileCoder, followed by Sodinokibi, Maze and Ryuk. Here's what security experts had to say about these findings: Oleg Kolesnikov, VP of Threat Research at Securonix "Having more visibility into the SSL/TLS traffic definitely...

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