Blog

Blog

Stop Relying on IP-based Security Before My Coffee Maker is Hit by a DDoS Attack

Last week, the Internet fell over itself to report on a botnet allegedly comprised of 100,000 smart devices. Things. The Internet of Things had finally attacked! While it's inarguable that, at some point, these devices will be compromised, corrupted and otherwise made to serve the pernicious purposes of attackers, deeper technical analysis points out that there's plenty of reason to be skeptical...
Blog

Facebook Might Have Exposed Your Phone's Private Photos

Another serious privacy vulnerability has been found on Facebook, which could have put at risk the private photos of millions of users. The problem lies in Facebook Photo Sync, an opt-in feature that the social network introduced in late 2012, which meant any photos you took on your iPhone or Android device would automatically sync up with your Facebook account. The good news is that the feature...
Blog

Thousands of Android & iOS Apps Still Vulnerable to FREAK Flaw

A recent study found that more than 2,000 apps in the Apple App Store and Google Play Store are still vulnerable to FREAK – a widespread security flaw discovered earlier this month. Attackers exploiting the vulnerability can intercept HTTPS connections between vulnerable users and servers, thus forcing them to use weakened encryption, which can then be broken or manipulated to steal sensitive data...
Blog

VERT Threat Alert: OpenSSL Vulnerability Advisory CVE-2015-0291 & CVE-2015-0204

Vulnerability Description The CVE-2015-0291 vulnerability introduces the possibility of a denial of service attack against a system running OpenSSL 1.0.2. If a malicious client connects to an OpenSSL server and the server requests a certificate from the malicious client, the malicious client can return a malformed cert that may trigger a NULL pointer dereference causing software reliability...
Blog

New High Severity OpenSSL Vulnerabilities Announced: CVE-2015-0291 & CVE-2015-0204

On Monday, the OpenSSL project team announced new releases that would be available today to fix security issues in OpenSSL that have been discovered as part of a major security audit and code refactoring project. When this announcement hit on Monday, there was a general panic in the IT and security community as it was mentioned vulnerabilities with a high severity were being patched, leading many...
Blog

Target Agrees to Pay $10 Million to Settle Class-Action Lawsuit for 2013 Data Breach

Target Corp has agreed to pay $10 million in order to settle a class-action lawsuit related to a 2013 breach that compromised users’ financial and personal information, according to court documents. The proposed settlement, which has yet to be heard in federal court, would require Target to deposit the total settlement amount into an escrow account, which the retailer would use to compensate...
Blog

Inside The Mind Of A Former Black Hat Hacker

Information security professionals are all too familiar with the work of black hat hackers. These individuals seek to gain unauthorized access to enterprises’ computer networks by exploiting security vulnerabilities – malicious activity which frequently threatens the personal and/or financial information of millions of customers. But what motivates an individual to become a black hat hacker? And...
Blog

Corporate Security Policies: Their Effect on Security, and the Real Reason to Have Them

Sarah Clarke and a few others were running a discussion on Twitter trying to hash out if security policies have any value. The discussion was started by a person critically stating that as far as he was concerned, they have no value at all. As Twitter isn't a good medium for summarizing the potential values that were identified, Sarah and I challenged each other to both blog about, with both a...
Blog

Security Policies - To Be Or Not To Be Pointless…

…that was the question. How many people actually find your security policies useful? Go on, guess. I’m willing to bet it’s only audit, risk, compliance management and the third-parties that assess you. Here’s the tweet from Phil Huggins ( @oracuk ) that kicked off a lively enough debate to make me want to write this. Phil’s core and continuing assertion was that good tech, awareness and risk...
Blog

OpenSSL to Fix 'High' Severity Security Flaw

The OpenSSL Project, a collaborative effort designed to develop an open source toolkit that implements SSL and TLS, has announced that it will be fixing a number of security flaws on Thursday , one of which it has labeled “high” severity. The initiative made the announcement in a message circulated yesterday. “The OpenSSL project team would like to announce the forthcoming release of OpenSSL...
Blog

Taking Advantage of Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity

Discussions around industrial control systems (ICS), such as supervisory and control data acquisition (SCADA) systems, often focus on how vulnerable the systems are. A key aspect of President Obama’s information sharing acts have been designed to encourage threat sharing to help protect the organizations and networks involved in critical infrastructure. However, while there are many advancements...
Blog

Hey Siri, How Come Strangers Are Listening To My Private Messages?

I don't often use Siri on my iPhone, but I've got to admit that when I do it's really handy. I'll be driving the car and thinking "Arrrghh! I forgot to put out the recycling last night. I'd better say sorry to my wife as soon as possible, as she'll be mad at me." I could stop the car on the hard shoulder (which would be dangerous), I could risk waiting until I get to my destination to tell my wife...
Blog

EquationDrug Espionage Platform Resembles 'Mini Operating System'

An analysis of the EquationDrug espionage platform has revealed that its capabilities can be extended via modules, leading security researchers to compare the framework’s architecture to a “mini-operating system.” In an article published on Securelist, Kaspersky Lab explains that EquationDrug is the main espionage platform used by Equation Group, an advanced threat actor that is responsible for...
Blog

How To Take Charge of Your Infosec Career

A typical information security conference can cost $5,000 plus plane and hotel costs and, although it might seem to be an exorbitant sum of money, many of us could easily defend the value and necessity of the training to bolster one’s technical capabilities. But when was the last time you invested even just a few hours of your time to working on developing your information security career in truly...
Blog

A Comparative Analysis of National “Cyber” Security Strategies – Germany and the U.S.

Last week, Tripwire published an article analyzing the ways in which the United States’ International Strategy for Cyberspace (ISC 2011) has informed the ideas outlined in the recently released 2015 National Security Strategy (U.S. NSS 2015). In my analysis, I compared both documents’ usage of the term “cyber” and found that while they vary somewhat in their approach, both documents support the...
Blog

80% of Retailers Failed Interim PCI Compliance Assessments

Despite retailers’ continuous improvement in compliance with the Payment Card Industry (PCI) security standards, four out of five companies are still failing at interim assessments, according to Verizon’s latest report . The report highlights that the overall state of compliance grew significantly in 2014, with 20 percent of organizations achieving full compliance – up from 11 percent in 2013, and...
Blog

VERT Threat Alert: March 2015 Patch Tuesday Analysis

Today’s VERT Alert addresses 14 new Microsoft Security Bulletins. VERT is actively working on coverage for these bulletins in order to meet our 24-hour SLA and expects to ship ASPL-605 on Wednesday, March 11. MS15-018 Multiple Memory Corruption Vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer MULTIPLE VBScript Memory Corruption Vulnerability CVE-2015-0032 Internet Explorer Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability...
Blog

VERT Vuln School: Stack Overflow 102

In VERT Vuln School: Stack Overflow 101 we reviewed a contrived example of a simple stack-based buffer overflow vulnerability in a binary wrapper for the nMap scanning tool. With this example, I showed how crafted command line parameters could be trigger an overflow of user-controlled data onto the stack. The synscan binary performed no checking on the length of a user-supplied buffer before...
Blog

The CIA Spy Campaign Against Apple: Security Research or Espionage?

Join us for a live webcast Thursday, March 26, 2015 - 11:00 AM Pacific / 2:00 PM Eastern "Caught in the Crossfire: The Business Impact Of Cyberwar & High Tech Espionage " with Shane Harris, author of @War: The Rise of the Military-Internet Complex The Intercept ¹ is reporting a secret program targeting Apple devices and software as part of a CIA sponsored event called "Jamboree," where groups of...
Blog

A Triple-A Approach to Telephone Security

With technology, we are constantly looking to improve security. We moved from HTTP to HTTPS to help secure online transactions and mitigate man-in-the-middle attacks. With DNS, we have started to implement DNSSEC. Why are we not looking backward at the cornerstone of modern communication, the device that still ties everyone together? The telephone. There have been minor updates to user experience...