Showing posts with label Compliance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Compliance. Show all posts

Thursday 27 August 2020

UAE IA Standards: Measuring Cyber Security Maturity

The UAE has become an emerging technology hub in a fast-evolving interconnected digital world while cyber-threats at a global scale are becoming far more complex, and increasingly inevitable.

The UAE has significant resources and is continuously raising the bar when it comes to innovation. At the same time, smart technologies, automation and technological advances make the region a particularly attractive target to threat actors. Effective cybersecurity strategies are moving from a standalone defensive approach to mandatory security programs representing the competitive advantage among whole organisations.

The UAE's federal body released the UAE Information Assurance (UAE IA) Standards on 25th June 2014, as part of the Cyber Security Framework, to manage the country's cyberspace.

Since the release of the UAE IA standard, the UAE and the globe, has seen a nearly exponential growth of cybersecurity landscape. The lates statistics from various sources depict an exponential growth of the cyber landscape while at the same time, offer trustworthy and actionable recommendations for thought-leaders and decision-makers.

Wednesday 20 December 2017

A "HIPPA Extortion" case hit the news

Following my recent article where I tried to explain the concept of "GDPR Extortion", a data breach of a Health IT provider hit the news early this week, and the case of "HIPPA Extortion" became a sad reality.

For those of you who are not familiar with HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996), is a United States legislation that provides data privacy and security provisions for safeguarding medical information, and in this case it applies to the Health IT provider that was breached.

The Nashville-based company (Medhost) is being asked by the cyber-criminals to pay 2 Bitcoins (BTC) which at the moment is approximately $35K (USD), otherwise they will sell the data they managed to steal. What is however very interesting in this story, is that they try to make their case by saying that they will do:
" ..a media release regarding the lack of security in a HIPPA environment. "
The screenshot is from Google's cache*, as the website of the breach company appeared on 19/Dec 2017 at 20:02 GMT. 

Wednesday 13 December 2017

Will "GDPR Extortion" become the new "trend" in cybercrime?

Even though this is not an "official" term that is being used (well, at least not yet), it does describe the concern I am trying to explain to people at different occasions. I often discuss GDPR from the security perspective, and the conversations most of the time end up focusing at the implications of the regulation and the "next day"

This is when I end up trying to describe the potential scenario of "GDPR Extortion", as I always like to see things through different lenses when it comes to forward-thinking in Information Security and CyberSecurity. 
By saying "GDPR Extortion" I tend to mean something similar to "DDoS Extortion", and it is easier to give an example to people in order to explain this type of potentially evolving threat. 

Tuesday 12 January 2016

Have you heard of "Cyber Insurance"?

The Cyber Liability Insurance Cover (CLIC) or otherwise referred to as cyber insurance, is a market that grew significantly in 2015. One of the main factors that contributed significantly to this growth is the constant increase of threats in the cyber space and more specifically the high profile data breaches that took place during the past years. Due to these data breaches companies were taken to court and were forced not only to cover the losses, but to take upon the extra costs for the data breaches as well. In most cases, these additional costs included crisis management, legal costs, reputational damages, engaging in identity theft resolution, credit and fraud monitoring and further technical costs as well.
Under the potential threat of a breach and the inevitable consequences, this has established not only a need but also a demand for a cyber insurance market. This has also been highlighted by a cyber survey conducted by RIMS. The survey showed that 74 percent of the companies without Cyber insurance will be purchasing one within the next two years. Likewise, by 2025 the total annual premiums for stand-alone cyber insurance are projected to grow to $20 billion.

Wednesday 11 November 2015

Guest Speaker for Cardiff University - CyberSecurity and the Payment Card Industry

I had the pleasure to be invited as a guest speaker to Cardiff University in order to give a talk about: "CyberSecurity and the Payment Card Industry". 


The talk starts with an introduction to the Payment Card Industry (PCI),  Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) and the Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council (PCI SSC). The participants are given the opportunity to understand what is an Approved Scanning Vendor (ASV), the responsibilities of a Qualified Security Assessor (QSA) and last but not least the job of a PCI Forensics Investigator (PFI).

Thursday 12 March 2015

EU Data Protection Regulation

The globalisation of data and the enormous technological developments of the last decade raises a number of new challenges when it comes to data protection and privacy. Current privacy legislation has not yet caught up with the technology boom when it comes to personal data, and fails to consider aspects such as cloud storage and the wide spread use of social networks. This is set to change with the launch of the proposed EU Data Protection Regulation.

Monday 10 November 2014

Vulnerability Scanners you should know about

The discovery and patching of security vulnerabilities can be a very difficult and a time-consuming task, especially without the use of a proper vulnerability scanner. 

The following, is a list of the most well-known vulnerability scanners currently available in the market. A security consultant should spend some time to familiarise himself/herself with these scanners. Find the scanner that is most suitable for your needs and use it to scan your network infrastructure for security vulnerabilities. Go through the reports these scanners generate and engage in remediating the vulnerabilities discovered. This can be an invaluable experience when it comes to becoming able to understand security issues affecting large network infrastructures. 

Some of these scanner can be used under a free license for personal use. 

01) Nessushttp://bit.ly/1prtrZ3

02) Nexposehttp://bit.ly/1NHBSML

03) CORE Impact Pro - http://bit.ly/19e7dWC

04) OpenVAShttp://bit.ly/1NHCdPy

05) QualysGuardhttp://bit.ly/1MUn52l

06) MBSA (Microsoft Baseline Security Analyser) - http://bit.ly/1MJ2NCE

07) Secunia PSIhttp://bit.ly/1iiTjGR

08) Retinahttp://bit.ly/1MBNHzo

09) Acunetix - http://bit.ly/1PA8rfA

10) SAINTscannerhttp://bit.ly/1RLtB9A

11) GFI Lan Guardhttp://bit.ly/1RLt8V2

If you know of a vulnerability scanner that you have used and it is worth mentioning here, let me know and I will add it to the list.