A Caribbean cyber-summit: Gotta love it
This year’s SAS: no shortage of the world’s top cybersecurity experts who’ll be telling all sorts of scary stories about who’s been hacked, where, and how, and what needs to be done in response.
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This year’s SAS: no shortage of the world’s top cybersecurity experts who’ll be telling all sorts of scary stories about who’s been hacked, where, and how, and what needs to be done in response.
True cybersecurity experts must be skilled at reverse engineering. Prior to SAS, Nico Brulez will hold a corresponding training session.
When an attack combines legitimate tools with fileless malware, it’s extremely difficult to detect, so antimalware teams constantly need to improve their skills
At VB2016, Juan Andrés Guerrero-Saade and Brian Bartholomew of GReAT discussed why APT attribution is not easy.
Early next year Kaspersky Lab will host yet another Security Analyst Summit, this time in Tenerife, Spain.
The story of how a biochip was implanted into my hand and why I needed it.
Brian Donohue and Chris Brook of Threatpost discuss Kaspersky Lab’s Security Analyst Summit, which took place last week in Cancun, Mexico
Kaspersky Lab researchers uncovered Desert Falcons, the first exclusively Arabic APT group, presenting their findings at the Security Analyst Summit in Cancun.
There is a flood of appliances which could be connected – and some are connected – without a second thought as to whether or not it’s necessary or secure.
The Carbanak APT group managed to steal a total of $1 bln from dozens of banks worldwide
In this talk security podcast, Chris Brook and Brian Donohue discuss the upcoming Security Analyst Summit, Flash zero days, the Ghost vulnerability and the Anthem breach
PUNTA CANA – Security professionals, law enforcement officials, and journalists converged on the Dominican Republic’s Punta Cana resort town for Kaspersky Lab’s extravagant Security Analysts Summit, which came on the
Kaspersky Daily editor Brian Donohue sat down with Dr. Charlie Miller, the notorious Apple hacker and Twitter security engineer, and Chris Valasek, the director of security intelligence at IOActive, for
Vitaly Kamlyuk of Kaspersky Lab explains the dangers of the vulnerable anti-theft software installed on ~2 million laptops. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gq8-7EErqpM]
Steve Adegbite, Director of Cybersecurity Strategies at Lockheed Martin, explains the “Cyber Kill Chain” in order to keep intruders out and shut down attacks if a system has been breached