Cyber Security News

July 2019

661.

Sandia Labs Find Vulnerability in Personalized Medicine Software

662.

As New Zealand Fights Online Hate, the Internet's Darkest Corners Resist

663.

St John Ambulance Praised for Response to Ransomware Attack

664.

Suspected Iranian Cyber Attacks Show No Sign Of Slowing

665.

What Connected Patients Risk



666.

What Should Your City Do If It's Hit By Ransomware? the Week in Tech

667.

Magento Patches Flaws Leading to Site Takeover

668.

Hacker Who Disrupted Sony Gaming Firm Gets Federal Prison

669.

UK ISP Group Names Mozilla 'Internet Villain' for Supporting 'Dns-over-https'

670.

7-Eleven Japanese Customers Lose $500,000 Due to Mobile App Flaw


What's the worst that could happen?


671.

Fake Samsung Firmware Update App Tricks More Than 10 Million Android Users

672.

Hacker Who Launched DDoS Attacks on Sony, EA, and Steam Gets 27 Months in Prison

673.

New Golang Malware Plays the Linux Field in Quest for Cryptocurrency

674.

YouTube Policy on Removing 'Instructional Hacking' Content Causes Infosec Community Outrage

675.

Sodinokibi Ransomware Is Now Using a Former Windows Zero-day



676.

Spyware Campaign Spreading Across Middle East Targets Android Phones

677.

MYOB Data Leak Sprayed Payments Info to Wrong Workers

678.

King's College London Breached GDPR By Handing Students' Information to Police, Review Finds

679.

Mexico's Federal Police Rebel Against New Security Plan

680.

3M's Global Visual Hacking Study Highlights Risks for Business Travelers


What's the worst that could happen?
...Why wait to find out?


681.

US Cyber Command Warns Of Outlook Flaw Exploited By Iranian Hackers

682.

One Year On, GDPR Needs a Reality Check

683.

D-Link to Undergo Security Audits for 10 Years as Part Of FTC Settlement

684.

NZ Finally Updates Its Cyber Security Strategy, So Where's Australia's?

685.

Reports Say China Is Installing Surveillance Apps on Some Visitors' Phones


What's the worst that could happen?
...Why wait to find out?
Let Secmentis perform proactive Penetration Testing.


686.

Security-as-a-service Soars, Says Canalys

687.

Trust Dimensions in Zero Trust Security

688.

Migrations Represent the Number One Challenge for Database Professionals

689.

To Benefit From DevOps Implementation, Security and Dev Teams Must Communicate Better

690.

APAC Firms in Developed Markets Warm Up to Cloud ERP

Secmentis specializes in offensive security and provides penetration testing services to organizations worldwide. We provide penetration testing services such as, external and internal network penetration testing, web application and mobile application penetration testing, and physical penetration testing and social engineering.

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