Delta Airlines CEO Thrashes Microsoft In Relation To The CrowdStrike Fiasco While Praising Apple

Posted in Commentary with tags , on August 3, 2024 by itnerd

As the kids would say… Shots fired.

Hot off the heels of this report, Delta CEO Ed Bastia in an interview on CNBC basically called out Microsoft in relation to the CrowdStike fiasco, while at the same time he praises Apple’s stability. See for yourself:

What I find interesting is that when asked if the reason Apple didn’t have a CrowdStrike moment was due to the fact that so few companies use Apple products (something that I do not believe is true by the way), Bastia punted the question. But even considering that, it’s interesting that he decided to be so public in terms of this whole situation rather than let the lawyers handle it. Maybe he’s so ticked off that he doesn’t care. Or perhaps he’s negotiating in public. Either way, this made an interesting situation a lot more interesting.

4.6 Million Voter and Election Documents Exposed Online 

Posted in Commentary on August 3, 2024 by itnerd

According to cybersecurity researcher Jeremiah Fowler, a recent data breach exposed 13 non-password protected databases containing over 4.6 million belonging to Platinum Technology Resource a long time election technology and services provider in the state of Illinois, USA.

Key elements: 

  • In the databases were encountered documents exposing voter records, ballots, multiple lists, and election-related records that contain PII, SSN, Driver’s License and voter ID numbers
  • The potential repercussions of this data being discovered by malicious individuals encompass, but are not limited to, identity theft, data theft, voter fraud and intimidation, election disruption, and the exposure of confidential information

You can find the full report here: https://www.vpnmentor.com/news/report-election-records-breach/

Apple Account Cards In The Wallet App Appears To Be Live In Canada

Posted in Commentary with tags on August 2, 2024 by itnerd

A quick primer before I get into the weeds. An Apple Account allows you to put money into it so that you can buy things like apps, music, etc. without having to use your credit card or PayPal to do it. You can even use it to buy stuff at the Apple Store either in store or online. And if you receive an App Store or Apple Store gift card, the amount of that gift card is added to that Apple Account.

Up until iOS 17.6 coming out, there was no separate card in the Wallet app that showed your balance. At least not in Canada as this was a US only thing as far as I know. But since iOS 17.6 came out, this has appeared for myself and for my wife, and for other Canadian iOS users I’ve spoken to. Here’s how you add an Apple Account Card if you wish to do so:

Go to the Wallet app and click on “Add Apple Account”.

You will then get this screen. Click Continue.

You will see this screen, and it should show your Apple ID as well as your Apple Account balance. I’ve redacted both in this screenshot. Click Next.

This screen indicates that the card is being added. It took me less than a minute for it to be added. When successful, you should see this:

If you get this screen, you’re good to go.

Is this something that you are going to do? If so, I’d love to know why in the comments below.

Abstract Security Announces Launch of Abstract Intelligence Gallery

Posted in Commentary with tags on August 1, 2024 by itnerd

Abstract Security today announced the launch of Abstract Intelligence Gallery (AIG) which puts threat intelligence to work for enterprise security teams bolstering their detection & analytics workflows without needing specialized platforms or complex management of intel data.

Abstract Security manages high quality threat intelligence through partnerships & integration for key intelligence vendors, including Silent Push, Flashpoint, Google Mandiant, CrowdStrike, Cybersixgill, Cyware, & SecLytics, enabled by the engine that drives Abstract’s streaming security fabric. In addition, customers can operationalize in-house intelligence by uploading it directly to their private Abstract Security deployment.

AIG is built on top of Abstract Security’s streaming analytics platform – enabling correlation of millions of indicators against billions of events in real time. This new capability unlocks several new use cases which will increase customers’ security posture, including: 

  • Streaming Event Correlation: Seamlessly correlates events to known adversary infrastructure, providing real time insights into security breaches.
  • Keyword Monitoring: Monitors threat intelligence feeds for patterns & keywords related to brand and executive monitoring, ensuring proactive threat awareness.
  • Unified Search and Reporting: Delivers a unified search and reporting capability across multiple intelligence providers, simplifying threat analysis and management.
  • Streaming Security Enrichment: Enriches events with real-time threat intelligence data, enhancing detection accuracy and reporting capabilities.

The Abstract Security team will be at Blackhat in Las Vegas next week to discuss this news. 

Abstract has seen growing demand since emerging from stealth and announcing its Seed funding in March 2024. In April, Abstract announced the opening of its first Middle East office. In May, the company announced the addition of Christopher Key to its Board of Directors and was selected as a “Pioneering Cybersecurity Startup” winner, as part of the 2024 Global Infosec Awards.

Panaseer Launches New Cybersecurity Controls Scorecard

Posted in Commentary with tags on August 1, 2024 by itnerd

Panaseer.  Continuous Controls Monitoring (CCM), today announced the launch of its new Cybersecurity Controls Scorecard. Available now for all existing and new customers, Panaseer’s Scorecard gives CISOs an ‘at-a-glance’ view of the coverage, effectiveness and performance of cybersecurity controls across business units, geographies and critical services – along with control failures that are contributing the most towards gaps in security. 

The Scorecard abstracts cybersecurity complexity by aggregating and distilling validated truth data into a single metric. Armed with a simple percentage score, CISOs can better communicate risk to both regulators and internal stakeholders – with the confidence that the data is complete and trusted. This enables business owners, security teams and senior management to better understand their level of compliance with security control policies, make informed choices, and track progress over time.  

Key features include: 

  • Layered business context: The Scorecard layers risk scores with critical business context, such as breakdowns by business function, geography, or compliance regime, providing a deeper understanding of risk and control coverage to support informed decisions.  
  • Accountability heatmap: The Scorecard’s company-wide heatmap enables CISOs to drive accountability throughout their organization, showing which teams, business units or functions present the most risk. Leaderboards can be created to incentivize employees.  
  • Highly configurable: Self-serve capabilities enable customers to tailor the Scorecard metric to their individual business needs based on customer specific codified policies and data drive KPIs or drawing from existing best practice dashboards developed by Panaseer. 
  • Actionable recommendations: Rather than simply showing where risk exists, the Scorecard gives details, such as accounts that need to be disabled or systems that urgently need patching, and remediation actions to enable organizations to actively reduce risk. 
  • Ability to track progress over time: To track controls performance for compliance, customers can take a snapshot-in-time view, allowing them to compare historical trends as far back as they’ve had the Panaseer platform deployed. 

Panaseer’s Cybersecurity Controls Scorecard is integrated into the Panaseer CCM platform, which collates and validates data from multiple sources – including systems with data about assets, people, accounts and applications – to gain a single source of truth on which the scores are calculated. This strong foundation of data science sets it apart from other solutions that rely on external data or incomplete surveys, sampling and attestation.  

This approach enables greater levels of transparency and tailoring; the methodology behind the scores is fully accessible and configurable. Users can take a deeper dive into the Scorecard data if required, breaking the score down by specific controls – such as the percentage of assets patched – to gain a granular view of control performance across the organization. 

For more information about the Cybersecurity Controls scorecard visit https://panaseer.com/platform/cybersecurity-controls-scorecard/.  

Palo Alto Networks Rolls Out Secure AI by Design Portfolio

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 31, 2024 by itnerd

What: Palo Alto Networks is making available to customers its Secure AI by Design product portfolio, aiming to secure organizations’ GenAI usage and development of enterprise AI applications by providing visibility, control, and protection specific to AI, addressing new risks and threats. As businesses increasingly integrate AI, the portfolio enables them to confidently build and use AI-powered apps, while also prioritizing the integrity of AI security frameworks from development to deployment.

Why: The need for securing AI applications has become increasingly important as businesses continue to integrate AI and LLMs into their operations. With employees adopting AI applications at a rapid pace and organizations across various industries gaining a competitive edge through AI-powered applications, the Secure AI by Design portfolio aims to securely enable AI deployments.

While the promises of AI are significant, it’s essential to acknowledge the associated risks with equal emphasis in order to realize its full potential. Bad actors are using AI to ramp up the scale of attacks, so it is important that organizations are proactive in their defense.

How: Organizations will be equipped to create a secure AI ecosystem that prioritizes the integrity of AI security frameworks from development to deployment. Businesses can fully harness the potential of AI without compromising security through the following use cases:

  • Securely enable GenAI applications: With the growing trend of employees using GenAI apps for business purposes, AI Access Security enables organizations to use AI tools with confidence. It gives security teams full visibility, application and data access controls, and continuous data risk monitoring.
  • Fortify AI supply chain: Businesses must be aware and rectify against possible risks. With Prisma Cloud AI Security Posture Management (AI-SPM), organizations can secure their AI ecosystem by identifying vulnerabilities and misconfigurations in models, applications and resources. It improves compliance and minimizes data exposure, thus improving the integrity of your AI security framework.
  • Protect enterprise AI applications: It is critical for organizations to see every component of their AI app ecosystem— including AI applications, models, inference and training datasets. AI Runtime Security is designed to help solve this, and protect against evolving zero-day and AI-specific threats, such as data leakage from AI models and applications, and safeguard models from misuse and attacks.

When: To start the roll out, AI Runtime Security is now available on Google Cloud and will be available later in August on Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure. To follow, AI-SPM will be available on August 6 and AI Access Security will be available on August 19.

Additional Information: Learn more about our Secure AI by Design portfolio, read our latest blogs on AI Runtime Security and AI-SPM. Explore Precision AI by Palo Alto Networks, which powers our cybersecurity platforms and solutions.

Introducing Mission AI Foundation

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 31, 2024 by itnerd

Mission Cloud today announced the launch of Mission AI Foundation, a comprehensive service designed to help businesses optimize their AI solutions on AWS while adhering to best practices and managing costs effectively.

83% of companies claim that AI is a top priority in their business plans. However, this widespread interest in AI adoption is often tempered by significant challenges. Concerns such as financial management, security, and knowledge gaps frequently stand in the way of companies eager to harness AI’s power to accelerate innovation and drive process efficiency.

To address these barriers, Mission AI Foundation combines support, engineering, strategy, and guidance to help organizations manage their cloud infrastructure and build for the future of AI.

The service is built on five pillars of continuous engagement:

  • AI solutions optimization, architecture guidance, and prompt engineering
  • Continuous cost optimization and ongoing financial management
  • Guidance on foundational best practices and cloud governance
  • Round-the-clock Enterprise support, led by Mission Cloud and backed by AWS
  • Cloud strategy for adopting technologies that transform your business

Key features of Mission AI Foundation include:

  • Access to a team of certified Cloud Analysts, Technical Account Managers, Solutions Architects, and AI Engineers
  • Improving token usage to ensure AI operations are economical and high-performing
  • Engineer Assist – AI, offering pay-as-you-go engineering support for AI solutions
  • Continuous guidance on prompting best practices to improve accuracy, optimize template, reduce hallucinations, and enhance overall model performance
  • 24/7 support with AWS Enterprise-level SLAs
  • Large Language Model Operations (LLMOps) to build and maintain your dedicated operations pipeline

Mission AI Foundation leverages Mission Control, the company’s cloud services platform, along with Amazon QuickSight and Amazon Q, to provide detailed cost visualization and management tools. The service also includes carbon footprint tracking, offering insights into the environmental impact of AI workloads.

Mission AI Foundation is now available. For more information or to schedule a demo, click here or contact sales@missioncloud.com.

Study Shows How Inclusive Social Media Really Is

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 31, 2024 by itnerd

The WizCase Team has conducted some research with the aim to understand “How inclusive is social media really?” by creating fresh social media accounts, and showing differences between platforms before algorithms kick in and take over.

According to their research:

  • White people were represented more than any other group — ranging from 51-60% of all posts.
  • TikTok had the most gender parity, with a 50/50 representation, and YouTube had the least, with 68% males and 32% females.
  • Only 4 posts in our sample from X contained any political messaging, 100% of those were conservative.

Why it matters:

Increasingly, fears of and reactions to “cancel culture” and censorship on social media make headlines. Conservatives claim they are being silenced, while liberals claim that hard-right accounts are being inappropriately boosted. Both sides are saying that more representation is needed for their group.

You can access their detailed report here: https://www.wizcase.com/blog/how-inclusive-is-social-media

Microsoft Says Yesterday’s Outage Was Caused By A DDoS Attack

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 31, 2024 by itnerd

Yesterday, Microsoft had a major outage with a lot of their online services. And today, Microsoft is serving up a reason for that outage:

An unexpected usage spike resulted in Azure Front Door (AFD) and Azure Content Delivery Network (CDN) components performing below acceptable thresholds, leading to intermittent errors, timeout, and latency spikes. While the initial trigger event was a Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attack, which activated our DDoS protection mechanisms, initial investigations suggest that an error in the implementation of our defenses amplified the impact of the attack rather than mitigating it.

So Microsoft was hit by a DDoS attack, and their automatic defences amplified it rather than mitigating it. At least they were honest about it and came out with this statement quickly. You can be sure that Microsoft will correct the issues that they found here so that a DDoS attack doesn’t have the same effect as it did yesterday.

OMG! $75 Million Ransom reportedly Paid To The Dark Angels Ransomware Group

Posted in Commentary with tags on July 31, 2024 by itnerd

ZScaler researchers have revealed that an undisclosed victim paid a record $75 million ransom to the Dark Angels ransomware group earlier this year. This figure nearly doubles the previous highest ransom of $40 million, paid by CNA Financial in 2021.

The Dark Angels group, reportedly a rebranded version of the Babuk ransomware family, first emerged in May 2022. The group’s most notorious attack occurred in September 2023, targeting Johnson Controls, an automation and manufacturing company. SentinelOne reported that the attackers “used Dark Angels ransomware to lock the company’s VMWare ESXi servers” and demanded $51 million, though it remains unclear if the ransom was paid.

Steve Hahn, Executive VP, BullWall had this to say:

“Unlike other forms of cyber attacks, Ransomware has ties to Russia in virtually all instances. Whether it’s Russian based groups or Russia based tools or hacking services, nearly every attack has deep Russian ties. The proxy war we are engaged in via Ukraine has amped up Russia’s attacks on “soft targets” in the US that will do the most damage, along with getting the most ransom. Out of control inflation in the US over the last 4 years can be amplified by attacks on the supply chain or production. This, along with the fact that manufacturing can be slightly behind on their security journey, makes them a very easy and obvious target. 

Virtually all Ransomware attacks include a double extortion technique. The threat actors will encrypt the data and steal the data. You’ll pay to decrypt (to get your data back) and you’ll pay again to not have them leak embarrassing information or sell your secrets on the dark web. In addition, virtually all Ransomware attacks are preceded by a command and control element. Threat actors slowly get in to the Network, then use special tools like Cobalt Strike to get admin credentials, with admin credentials they can do whatever they desire. Including encrypting your backup or disabling your security products. 

All of these groups are connected to Russian Hackers. The groups and affiliations merge and morph. They use different encryption payloads but most are nearly undetectable by modern EDRs if they can launch them in the customers environment.

Total Ransomware payments have exploded to over a billion dollars a year, in just known payments, the number of successful attacks has more than doubled in the last 2 years and the average payment has gone up from $850,000 to over $2M in 2024. 

Organizations need defense in depth. Layers and layers of security. They also need to focus on not just preventing Ransomware, but also containment and recovery. They need to treat a successful Ransomware attack as a “when” not “if” scenario and plan accordingly. Table stakes is also MFA, Microsgementation and Zero Trust. But these are silver bullets. They still need to figure out how they react and respond quickly when that event occurs. 

Zero Trust is important. It will certainly lessen the chances of an attack. But this journey is typically very long for customers and still not a silver bullet. Zero day attacks, Shadow IT, personal devices, IoT devices, these are all attack vectors for Ransomware and once the encryption begins at the shares drives, whether those are cloud or local, it’s only a matter of time before all of the data is encrypted, even with zero trust network architecture in place. 

And of course, AI will increase the volume of phishing attacks and allow each and every email a custom look. AI tools can search all public information about their “target”, LinkedIn, Yelp, Facebook, Venmo payments. Anything public to find recipients to interact with and form a custom phishing email to the user. This means the number of highly targeted attacks will explode in the coming years. Along with that, AI can create Ransomware variants in milliseconds that will appear to EDR and antivirus as something they’ve never seen, making it incredibly difficult for them to stop those attacks. Along with that, dark web brokers are connecting people with footholds and access in companies to those with the payloads. The Facebook Marketplace for hackers.”

There’s a lot to unpack from Mr. Hahn, but it is very much worth reading. Organizations need to be prepared for all eventualities. As in keeping the bad guys out, and what to do if they get in. And most importantly, they should never, ever pay up as that simply encourages these threat actors. Frankly, your best defence is to do everything possible to not be a victim.