Some of the biggest security problems start quietly. No alerts. No warnings. Just small actions that seem normal but aren’t. Attackers now know how to stay hidden by blending in, and that makes it hard to tell when something’s wrong.
This week’s stories aren’t just about what was attacked—but how easily it happened. If we’re only looking for the obvious signs, what are we missing right in front Some of the biggest security problems start quietly. No alerts. No warnings. Just small actions that seem normal but aren’t. Attackers now know how to stay hidden by blending in, and that makes it hard to tell when something’s wrong.
This week’s stories aren’t just about what was attacked—but how easily it happened. If we’re only looking for the obvious signs, what are we missing right in front
- U.S. Seizes $7.74M in Crypto Tied to North Korea’s Global Fake IT Worker Network The Hacker [email protected] (The Hacker News)
- ‘Water Curse’ Targets Infosec Pros Via Poisoned GitHub Repositories darkreadingElizabeth Montalbano, Contributing Writer
- Anubis Ransomware Encrypts and Wipes Files, Making Recovery Impossible Even After Payment The Hacker [email protected] (The Hacker News)
- Security Is Only as Strong as the Weakest Third-Party Link darkreadingShimon Modi
- NIST Outlines Real-World Zero-Trust Examples darkreadingFahmida Y. Rashid
- The Beginner’s Guide to Using AI: 5 Easy Ways to Get Started (Without Accidentally Summoning Skynet)by Tech Jacks
- Tips and Tricks to Enhance Your Incident Response Proceduresby Tech Jacks
- Building a Security Roadmap for Your Company: Strategic Precision for Modern Enterprises by Tech Jacks
- The Power of Policy: How Creating Strong Standard Operating Procedures Expedites Security Initiativesby Tech Jacks
- Building a Future-Proof SOC: Strategies for CISOs and Infosec Leaders by Tech Jacks
- Security Gate Keeping – Annoying – Unhelpfulby Tech Jacks
- The Beginner’s Guide to Using AI: 5 Easy Ways to Get Started (Without Accidentally Summoning Skynet)
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