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The authority, which serves more than 650,000 consumers and has had more than 100,000 smart meters installed since fall 2012, had historically kept its OT processes air gapped and separate from IT. So far, “it’s been going really well,” she said. However, such modernization is not without risk.
Particularly in IoT, where we find ourselves using MQTT and other ancient protocols, not for what they were originally designed for, but for our immediate need for lightweight communications among devices. Shellshock, as a name, stuck and became the name going forward. This momentary obsession over the name is not entirely a joke.
Particularly in IoT, where we find ourselves using MMQT and other ancient protocols, not for what they were originally designed for, but for our immediate need for lightweight communications among devices. Shellshock, as a name, stuck and became the name going forward. This momentary obsession over the name is not entirely a joke.
PPP wanted to give their past high school selves the infosec education they didn’t have. Megan Kerns of Carnegie-Mellon University joins The Hacker Mind to talk about the early days and the continued evolution of this popular online infosec competition site. in InfoSec however, learning happens 365 days a year.
And, there’s thirty more villages including Girls Hack Village, the Voting Machine Hacking village, the IoT Village, and the Bio Hacking village. We get the InfoSec people that that were on enterprise systems. In my you know 1011 Oh man even more than that 2012 1415 years now. Again, all all around the InfoSec community.
To answer these questions, Paul Roberts, Editor-in-Chief of the Security Ledger, has founded securepairs.org , a group of infosec experts who are volunteering their free time to fight for the digital right to repair in local legislation. Back then Paul was writing infosec stories for IDG and I was doing the same at ZDNet.
To answer these questions, Paul Roberts, Editor-in-Chief of the Security Ledger, has founded securepairs.org , a group of infosec experts who are volunteering their free time to fight for the digital right to repair in local legislation. Back then Paul was writing infosec stories for IDG and I was doing the same at ZDNet.
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