Cyber Security News

September 2019

121.

5 Cheap(ish) Things to Beef Up Your Digital Security

122.

How Federal Agencies Can Be More Proactive About Cloud Security

123.

Energy Department Not Doing Enough to Protect Grid Against Cyber Attacks: Watchdog

124.

Roger Stone Judge Won't Let Defense Tie Case to Russian Hackers

125.

Australians Are Reporting Cyber Crime Activities Once Every 10 Minutes



126.

Dell Rolls Out New Data Protection Storage Appliances and Capabilities

127.

17 US Utility Firms Targeted By Mysterious State-sponsored Group

128.

Malindo Air Identifies Employees Of E-commerce Contractor Behind Data Breach

129.

Could Audio Warnings Augment Your Ability to Fight Off Cyber Attacks?

130.

North Korean-Linked Dtrack RAT Discovered



131.

Additional US Utilities Targeted with LookBack Malware

132.

'Carpet-bombing' DDoS Attack Takes Down South African ISP for an Entire Day

133.

Russian State Hackers Rarely Share Code with One Another

134.

99 Percent Of All Misconfigurations in the Public Cloud Go Unreported

135.

Study Shows That Majority Of Second-hand Hard Drives Contain Previous Owner's Data


The best defense is offense. Talk to Secmentis today.


136.

Political Targets at Risk as Fancy Bear Returns with Refreshed Backdoor Malware

137.

Top Features Of Multicloud Management Tools

138.

Equifax Breach Prompted Privacy Culture Shift

139.

Ad Network Head Cops to Role in $36M Online Fraud Scheme

140.

House Panel Presses SEC on Whether Libra Is a Security


Outwitting malicious attackers? Get in touch.


141.

Cyber Security and the Road Ahead

142.

SQL Attacks Are a Piece Of Cake for Hackers - and the Risk to Firms Is High

143.

IPhone Hackers Who Spied on Uighurs Also Targeted Tibetans

144.

Adobe Fresco iPad Drawing App Now Available

145.

Lion Air Data Leak Came From Contractor's Ex-Staff, Airline Says



146.

Latest Lorca Cyber Security Challenge Has IoT Focus

147.

Singapore Payment Card Data Compromised By JavaScript Sniffers

148.

What's Old in Enterprise Ransomware Attacks Is Still Relevant: Report

149.

Cyber Security and the Road Ahead

150.

GandCrab Ransomware Writers Still Active Despite 'Retirement'

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.

The headlines on Secmentis Cyber Security News are selected by computer algorithms that determine which headlines are displayed and in what order.

 Hackers are active 24/7. Are you?

Talk to us today to find out how our experts can best help you