AWS updates its edge computing solutions with new hardware and Local Zones

AWS today closed out its first re:Invent keynote with a focus on edge computing. The company launched two smaller appliances for its Outpost service, which originally brought AWS as a managed service and appliance right into its customers’ existing data centers in the form of a large rack. Now, the company is launching these smaller […] Continue reading AWS updates its edge computing solutions with new hardware and Local Zones

Splunk acquires Plumbr and Rigor to build out its observability platform

Data platform Splunk today announced that it has acquired two startups, Plumbr and Rigor, to build out its new Observability Suite, which is also launching today. Plumbr is an application performance monitoring service, while Rigor focuses on digital experience monitoring, using synthetic monitoring and optimization tools to help businesses optimize their end-user experiences. Both of […] Continue reading Splunk acquires Plumbr and Rigor to build out its observability platform

‘Anonymous’ takes down Atlanta Police Dept. site after police shooting

Hackers affiliating themselves with the hacktivist label have joined the Black Lives Matter backlash after a fatal police shooting on Friday. Continue reading ‘Anonymous’ takes down Atlanta Police Dept. site after police shooting

Here’s how DHS prepared to keep hackers out of the Super Bowl

When the New England Patriots and Los Angeles Rams kick off in Atlanta on Sunday, a network of at least nine operational centers staffed by city, state, and federal officials will be humming with activity near the stadium to monitor for cyber and physical threats. About 60 employees from DHS’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) will be onsite — with a DHS cyber official at each operational center — making it one of the biggest DHS cybersecurity operations at a Super Bowl to date. “We really want everything to run smoothly,” Klint Walker, a DHS cybersecurity adviser in Atlanta told CyberScoop, adding that the goal is to keep opportunistic attackers who would target a high-profile event “from making the newspaper.” Walker was part of a team of DHS officials who worked through the 35-day partial government shutdown without pay to finish assessing and mitigating cybersecurity risk at the Super Bowl. […]

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At $17 million, Atlanta network recovery six times more expensive than estimated

The SamSam ransomware attack on the city of Atlanta in March is probably one of the most expensive security incidents, with the recovery cost adding up to some $17 million of taxpayers’ money, according to a seven-page “confidential and pri… Continue reading At $17 million, Atlanta network recovery six times more expensive than estimated

Massive ransomware attack forcing authorities to move to typewriters

By Waqas
The ransomware attack also forced employees to use hand receipts. Two municipalities in Alaska (one town and one borough to be precise) have become victims of sophisticated encryption-based malware (ransomware) attack. Reportedly, the Matanusk… Continue reading Massive ransomware attack forcing authorities to move to typewriters

As ransomware hobbled Atlanta, banks drilled for next iteration of attacks

As the Atlanta city government struggled to recover from March’s ransomware attack, cybersecurity personnel from U.S. banks huddled two miles from city headquarters to practice dealing with the same type of disruptive malware. The exercise, which assembled 18 financial institutions and the industry’s threat-sharing center, simulated a bank’s computer network and tasked participants with defeating “WannaCry-like” ransomware, according to ManTech International Corp., the cybersecurity company that hosted the drill in April. Participants, including big U.S. banks, connected to ManTech’s Advanced Cyber Range Environment (ACRE), a computing facility that can test network defenses against various strains of malware. Some participated from the Federal Reserve office in midtown Atlanta, according to ManTech spokesman Jim Crawford. In this case, exercise planners mimicked the WannaCry ransomware, which struck more than 300,000 computers in 150 countries last year. The company already had practice using that virus for ACRE training “when it was still in the wild,” Brett Barraclough, a ManTech […]

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