Episode 171 - The Stitched Up Episode episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 13, 2023 · 43 MIN

Episode 171 - The Stitched Up Episode

from The Host Unknown Podcast · host Andrew Agnês, Javvad Malik, Thom Langford

This week in InfoSec  (09:48)With content liberated from the “today in infosec” twitter account and further afield8th October 2018: Google announced that it exposed the private info of hundreds of thousands of Google+ users between 2015 and 2018, only disclosing it 7 months after discovery because it was reported by The Wall Street Journal. Social network Google+ launched in 2011 and closed in 2019. Google hid major Google+ security flaw that exposed users’ personal informationhttps://twitter.com/todayininfosec/status/171115972855268566716th October 1983: FBI agents raided homes of "young electronics buffs known as 'hackers'" in 6 states as part of an investigation of unauthorized intrusions into scores of large commercial and DoD computers. These teens included Lord Flathead - real name Tom Anderson, future MySpace founder.https://twitter.com/todayininfosec/status/1712593589237076056 Rant of the Week (15:44)Everest cybercriminals offer corporate insiders cold, hard cash for remote accessThe Everest ransomware group is stepping up its efforts to purchase access to corporate networks directly from employees amid what researchers believe to be a major transition for the cybercriminals.In a post at the top of its dark web victim blog, Everest said it will offer a "good percentage" of the profits generated from successful attacks to those who assist in its initial intrusion.The group also promised to offer partners "full transparency" regarding the nature of each operation, as well as confidentiality about their role in the attack.Everest is specifically looking for access to organizations based in the US, Canada, and Europe, and would accept remote access by a variety of means including TeamViewer, AnyDesk, and RDP. Billy Big Balls of the Week (22:23)Chinese citizens feel their government is doing a fine job with surveillanceChinese residents are generally comfortable with widespread use of surveillance technology, according to a year-long project conducted by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) and an unnamed non-government research partner.The project mainly investigated how state surveillance is conducted by Beijing and how the population of the People's Republic of China (PRC) perceives it. For the investigation, the researchers conducted media analysis, and an online survey of over 4,000 Chinese citizens.Most respondents ranked their trust in central government positively – at an average of 7.3 on a scale out of 10. Businesses received a 6.7 rating. When it came to surveillance – by video, audio or internet activity – roughly half said they were comfortable.As part of the project, ASPI provided a tool that could be considered quite subversive in China: an interactive website that provided access to uncensored non-Beijing information about deployed surveillance technologies and the agencies that run them. It consisted of five educational modules with quizzes at the end.The website content was shaped by the survey results and reached over 55,000 users over the course of four months. It covered facial recognition, Wi-Fi probes, DNA surveillance, database management and surveillance cameras. Industry News (28:08)AWS to Mandate Multi-Factor Authentication from 2024Blackbaud Settles Ransomware Breach Case For $49.5mDNA Tester 23andMe Hit By Credential Stuffing CampaignMGM Resorts Reveals Over $100M in Costs After Ransomware AttackAir Europa Asks Customers to Cancel Cards After BreachUS Smashes Annual Data Breach Record With Three Months LeftEuropean Police Hackathon Hunts Down TraffickersChinese APT ToddyCat Targets Asian Telecoms, GovernmentsCalifornia Enacts “Delete Act” For Data Privacy Tweet of the Week (36:01) https://twitter.com/ireteeh/status/1712408097170325968 Come on! Like and bloody well subscribe!

This week in InfoSec is a story about a friend to everyone Rant of the Week asks why nobody thought of this before Billy Big Balls is a mid-year 360 review of the Chinese government, by its citizens Industry News brings us the latest and greatest security news stories from around the world And Tweet of the Week focuses on Cyber Security Awareness Month

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Episode 171 - The Stitched Up Episode

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This episode was published on October 13, 2023.

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This week in InfoSec  (09:48)With content liberated from the “today in infosec” twitter account and further afield8th October 2018: Google announced that it exposed the private info of hundreds of thousands of Google+ users between 2015 and 2018,...

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