Cyber security trends for 2022

Nothing is more difficult than making predictions. Instead of trowing out wild ideas what might be coming, I have collected here some trends other people have predicted or reported.

Why the Future Needs Passwordless Authentication
https://securityintelligence.com/future-needs-passwordless-authentication/
As of September, Microsoft users no longer have to rely on passwords when logging in to their accounts. Passwords were suitable for authentication when users had fewer accounts, but things have changed.
Nowadays, everyone’s digital footprint is larger, making passwords more of a burden than a security necessity.

Cyber Warfare: What To Expect in 2022
https://securityintelligence.com/articles/cyber-warfare-what-to-expect-2022/
Cyberwarfare is not a future threatit’s a clear and present danger.
While the concept of cyber terrorism might sound like something from a fictional movie, our interconnected world is riddled with security flaws that make it an unfortunate reality. Read on as we cover seven cyber warfare and cybersecurity threats to watch out for in 2022.

Prediction Season: What’s in Store for Cybersecurity in 2022?
https://www.securityweek.com/prediction-season-whats-store-cybersecurity-2022
The past year has been quite challenging and tiring for many IT and security professionals, as threat actors capitalized on the rapidly changing environment created by accelerated digitalization and cloud transformation in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. And while we all hope that the next year is better when it comes to the onslaught of daily phishing, ransomware, and credential stuffing attacks; cyber criminals will likely learn from this year’s successful tactics, retool, and pivot them into next year’s campaigns to wreak even more havoc in all lives.
Consider the following threats that are on the horizon in 2022 and start preparing for them now:
Compromised Identities Continue to Fuel the Cyberattack Engine
Ransomware Attacks Evolve to Multifaceted Extortion Schemes
Pay Attention to the Supply Chain Threats
The Work from Anywhere Era Creates New Threats

“AI and ML will be an enabler for cybersecurity for the foreseeable future”
https://cisomag.eccouncil.org/ai-and-ml-will-be-an-enabler-for-cybersecurity-for-the-foreseeable-future/
We are proceeding in an era of “Malthusian” advances in science and technology, enabled by faster computing and ever-expanding data analytics. Those emerging technologies are significantly impacting cybersecurity. They include artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning, high-performance computing, cloud, edge computing, 5G, and eventually quantum technologies.
Computing systems that employ AI and ML are becoming more pervasive and critical to cyber operations and have become a major focus of cybersecurity research development and investments. Advanced 5G and wireless networks will benefit higher traffic capacities, lower latency, increased reliability, and enable processing and analytics in real-time. Edge computing strives to bring real-time computation, data storage, and operations closer to the device, rather than relying on a central location, avoiding latency issues. Technologies that improve capabilities for discovering, categorizing, monitoring, synthesizing, and automating the analysis of data are advantages in mitigating cybersecurity threats. Specifically, such tech can be used to bolster botnet detection and mitigation technology, data visualization tools, active malware protection, rootkit detection and mitigation technology, and incident response analytics.
Emerging tech can be a two-way street for good and bad. Artificial intelligence and machine learning can be used by hackers to automate target selection and more. Threat actors, especially state-sponsored and criminal enterprises, are becoming more sophisticated by searching for vulnerabilities and infiltrating malware by adapting (and automating), enabling machine learning, deep learning, artificial intelligence, and other analytic tools.
Also, the emergence of the Internet of Things presents special security challenges. There are an estimated 44 billion IoT endpoints today and trillions of sensors connected to those endpoints. Hackers have many attack options and entries for inserting malware into such a large and unregulated attack surface.

Google Finds 35,863 Java Packages Using Defective Log4j
https://www.securityweek.com/google-finds-35863-java-packages-using-defective-log4j
The computer security industry is bracing for travel on long, bumpy roads littered with Log4j security problems as experts warn that software dependency patching hiccups will slow global mitigation efforts.
The sheer scale and impact of the crisis became a bit clearer this week with Google’s open-source team reporting that a whopping 35,863 Java packages in Maven Central are still using defective versions of Log4j library.
The vulnerability, flagged as CVE-2021-44228, was first discovered and reported by the Alibaba cloud security team on November 24 this year. Less than two weeks later, exploitation was spotted in the wild, prompting the release of multiple high-priority patches and an industry-wide scramble to apply practical mitigations.
Many actors have exploited the critical Apache Log4j vulnerability named Log4Shell to infect vulnerable devices. Apache has released several Log4j versions to fix the original Log4j vulnerability (CVE-2021-44228) and newer findings on the same software (CVE-2021-44832, CVE-2021-45046, CVE-2021-45105, CVE-2021-42550).

Threat Intelligence on Log4j CVE: Key Findings and Their Implications
https://www.akamai.com/blog/security/threat-intelligence-on-log4j-cve-key-findings-and-their-implications
Expect this vulnerability to have a long attack tail. We anticipate that due to how widely used this software is and the large number of exploit variations, we will continue to see exploit attempts for months to come and expect many breaches will get uncovered going forward.
Attackers used opportunistic injections and became more targeted. Consequences of the reconnaissance may not be fully understood for months. While the attacks can be mitigated by patching and other methods, it’s unclear how many breaches have happened already. It will take time for the breaches to come to light and for us to understand their magnitude.

Ransomware in 2022: We’re all screwed
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ransomware-in-2022-were-all-screwed/
Over the past few years, we’ve seen ransomware operators evolve from disorganized splinter groups and individuals to highly sophisticated operations, with separate teams collaborating to target everything from SMBs to software supply chains. Ransomware infection is no longer an end goal of a cyberattack. We are experiencing the “golden era of ransomware,” now in part due to multiple monetization options.

Burnout: The next great security threat at work
https://blog.1password.com/state-of-access-report-burnout-breach/
Many companies feel like they’ve successfully pivoted to remote and hybrid work. Team members have learned the tools and processes required to be successful outside the office, and IT departments have adjusted their security rules and policies accordingly. But now, nearly two years into the pandemic, another cybersecurity threat has
emerged: employee burnout.

In 2022, security will be Linux and open-source developers job number one
https://www.zdnet.com/article/in-2022-security-will-be-linux-and-open-source-developers-job-number-one/
Linux is everywhere. It’s what all the clouds, even Microsoft Azure, run. It’s what makes all 500 of the Top 500 supercomputers work. Heck, even desktop Linux is growing if you can believe Pornhub, which claims Linux users grew by 28%, while Windows users declined by 3%. Its real trouble isn’t so much with open-source itself. There’s nothing magical about open-source methodology and security. Security mistakes can still enter the code. Linus’s law is that given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow. But, if not enough developers are looking, security vulnerabilities will still go unnoticed. As what I’m now calling Schneier’s law, “Security is a process, not a product, ” points out constant vigilance is needed to secure all software.

The future of OT security in an IT-OT converged world
https://www.theregister.com/2021/11/09/securing_ics_in_the_cloud/
Securing ICS in the cloud requires ‘fundamentally different’ approach
If you thought the industrial internet of things (IIoT) was the cutting edge of industrial control systems, think again. Companies have been busy allowing external access to sensors and controllers in factories and utilities for a while now, but forward-thinking firms are now exploring a new development; operating their industrial control systems (ICS) entirely from the cloud. That raises a critical question: who’s going to protect it all?
Dave Masson, Director of Enterprise Security at Darktrace, calls this new trend ‘ICSaaS’. “ICS for the cloud is starting to happen now. That represents a whole new world for industrial technology and security.”
This trend has been possible for the last decade or so, he explains, but the uptake has been slow. Now, Masson is hearing from clients who are actioning it.
Operational technology admins may be nervous about allowing cloud-based control of their infrastructures, but they’re attracted by the potential benefits. If operators are accessing ICS remotely anyway, then it makes it easier to consider cloud-based interfaces. These make the management infrastructure cheaper and easier to operate.
In this scenario, the hardware components that make up ICS stay where they are. We’re not talking about virtualizing programmable logic controllers here. It’s the data governing their operation that moves to the cloud. That means the applications, databases, and other services that operators rely on to keep those components running smoothly.
Security is just as important in these new cloud-enabled environments as it was in the old legacy walled gardens, but the challenges facing defenders are different. The cloud is eroding the gap between IT and OT. OT is now part of what looks increasingly like a common IT network.
“Now, anybody can access this network from anywhere, so you’ve got to make sure you have good controls around who’s got permission”
“This raises questions about data security, compliance, and regulation.”
OT admins, used to maintaining an iron grip on their infrastructure, now risk a loss of visibility and control. There are organizational worries to consider beyond the technological ones. Converging IT/OT infrastructures is only part of the story. You must also decide who is managing security for the expanded network. Is it the IT security team, or the OT team, or both?
Zero trust architecture is a common talking point today when discussing cloud-based security, and that will be important. ICSaaS is only one part of a broader shift towards OT/IT convergence. The advent of 5G, along with the development of edge computing, will accelerate the trend still further.

Sophos 2022 Threat Report: Malware, Mobile, Machine learning and more!
https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2021/11/09/2022-threat-report/
we’ve covered five main topics: 1 Malware, 2 Mobile, 3 Machine Learning and AI, 4 Ransomware (because we simply couldn’t not give it a section of its own), and 5 Where next?. PDF:
https://www.sophos.com/en-us/medialibrary/pdfs/technical-papers/sophos-2022-threat-report.pdf

“AI and ML will be an enabler for cybersecurity for the foreseeable future”
https://cisomag.eccouncil.org/ai-and-ml-will-be-an-enabler-for-cybersecurity-for-the-foreseeable-future/
What are some of the emerging technologies in security? Would these generate opportunities and create challenges?
Critical Infrastructure (CI) and supply chain will be targeted even more in 2022 (state-sponsored, cybercriminal gangs) with ransomware and malware attacks.
• Investment and risk strategies will expand in conducting vulnerability assessments and filling operational gaps with cybersecurity tools. Tools include Data Loss Prevention (DLP), encryption, identity and access management solutions, log management, and SIEM platforms.
• Despite efforts to attract workers to security and tech jobs, the qualified cybersecurity worker shortage will continue to pose major operational challenges. Both the public and private sectors are currently facing challenges from a dearth of cybersecurity talent. A report out from the firm Cybersecurity Ventures estimates there are 3.5 million unfilled cybersecurity jobs in 2021. 2022 is not showing any signs of improvement in hiring.
• The Internet of Things (IoT) will pose a growing cybersecurity risk. IoT’s exponential connectivity is an ever-expanding mesh of networks and devices.
There are some specific areas where AI technology will contribute to making cybersecurity smarter include:
• AI can provide a faster means to detect and identify cyberthreats. Cybersecurity companies will be using software and a platform powered by AI that monitors real-time activities on the network by scanning data and files to recognize unauthorized communication attempts, unauthorized connections, abnormal/malicious credential use, brute force login attempts, unusual data movement, and data exfiltration. This allows businesses to draw statistical inferences and protect against anomalies before they are reported and patched.
• AI will impact Incident Diagnosis and Response capabilities.
While descriptive analytics provided by network surveillance and threat detection tools can answer the question “what happened,” incident diagnosis analytics address the question of “why and how it happened.” To answer those questions, new software applications and platforms powered by AI can examine past data sets to find root causes of the incident by looking back at change and anomaly indicators in the network activities
• AI will also enable better cyberthreat intelligence reports by analysts. Next year analysts will be able to use AI tools to generate automated cyberthreat intelligence reports (CTI). Cyberthreat intelligence reports provide the indicators and early warning necessary to better monitor unusual activities on a given network and detect more rapidly cyber threats.
AI and ML will be an enabler for cybersecurity for the foreseeable future. AI-powered tools and automation enablement will play an increased and integral role in keeping us cyber-safe in 2022 and beyond.

Kännyköiden tietoturva menee uusiksi
https://etn.fi/index.php/13-news/12788-kaennykoeiden-tietoturva-menee-uusiksi
In smartphones, security has been in place for more than a decade, with trusted processing performed in the TEE (Trusted Execution Environment) section of device memory. The current standard solution for smartphone security is typically created with Arm’s TrustZone technology. The phone’s own security comes from TEE. A secure boot usually includes a TEE. TEE has been an elegant solution for smartphones, although it is becoming old-fashioned (Arm TrustZone was developed 15 years ago).
The memory required by the TEE has not been available in the small controller chips used for embedded applications. Manufacturers have promoted Safe Boot and Memory Encryption or Flash Encryption, but they have been pretty weak solutions. Recently, Arm’s TrustZone M has introduced a new security model for controllers.
In recent years, this picture has begun to diversify. A revolution is underway now. Google has launched a keystone technology that allows an application to generate a system-maintained key and authenticate services (still uses TEE).
In the future, for example, encryption keys will be stored in an isolated memory area, an enclave, says Jan-Erik Ekberg, head of Huawei’s HSSL laboratory (Helsinki System Security Lab). Five years ago, Intel introduced SGX technology for PC servers, which simply means security extension commands added to the CPU chip. In this solution, TEE type protections are provided by a secure enclave. The use of this type of security enclave needs less code than traditional TEE structure. An enclave is a temporary structure in the memory of a device. It is created only for security processes and exits when it has completed its task. The difference is significant in the TEE structure, where another kernel runs all the time alongside the operating system. When there is no other parallel kernel, there is one component less to attack.
In Intel’s SGX, enclaves were implemented through caching, which limited their use. Intel has sought to overcome this limitation with newer TDX (Trust Domain Extensions) technology. AMD aims to do the same with its own SEV (Secure Encrypted Virtualization) technology.
Enclave-style solution structure will also come in the smart phones. The new Armv9-A architecture last year offers a realm mode that is very close to the technologies offered on the server side (Intel SGX). With the coming enclaves, an infinite number of secured environments will be available in principle.
In the mobile ecosystem, TEE is so deeply rooted that the transition will probably take five years. During the transition period TEE and more dynamic solutions will be on the market in parallel.

Kyberhyökkäykset uhkaavat jo tavarantoimituksiakin
https://www.uusiteknologia.fi/2021/11/08/kyberhyokkaykset-uhkaavat-jo-tavarantoimituksiakin/
Cyber attacks will cause chaos in product supply chains in the future, estimates Japanese security firm Trend Micro in its latest report. They can also cause physical harm to people, so it’s not just about problems with production or distribution.
According to Trend Micro, network connectivity by 2030 will affect our everyday lives even more, both physically and mentally. At the same time, cyber threats are constantly evolving and abusing technological innovation in ever new ways.
Artificial intelligence tools democratize cybercrime from technically savvy individuals and criminal organizations to all. The new “Everything as a Service” service model also makes cloud service providers very attractive targets for cyber attackers.
Massive IoT (MIoT) environments in industrial facilities, logistics centers, transportation systems, healthcare, education, commerce, and homes are attractive targets for saboteurs and blackmailers. The new 5G and subsequent 6G networks are also making attacks more sophisticated and targeted.
In the future, user manipulation and fake news will become increasingly important and difficult to ignore when fed to smart glasses. Reality can be badly distorted.
https://resources.trendmicro.com/rs/945-CXD-062/images/WP01_Project%202030_White%20Paper_210505US_Web.pdf

Jarno Limnéll varoittaa “kyberpandemiasta” internetin häiriö voi panna maailman taas sekaisin
https://www.tivi.fi/uutiset/tv/211df5c9-7909-47b7-842b-719f6a496206
Cyber harassment and sports doping have a lot in common. Tracing and testing methods are evolving, but so are scams. And scammers always seem to be one step ahead. Sometimes they are only revealed years later. “The world is moving in the direction that technology is evolving faster and faster, and rather increasing the possibility of various disruptions and creating new types of vulnerabilities. There is no seamless security,” Limnagl says. So even with technology, the world will not be completed. In addition, crises always come as a surprise: New York on September 11, the Bosnian war, Hitler’s rise to power, the shots in Sarajevo. “In light of history, we’re always surprised. And if you think about it, technology only adds to the complexity and surprise of crises.”

Kyberhyökkäykset kiihtyvät, mutta yritykset voivat vastata niihin
https://etn.fi/index.php/new-products/13-news/12920-kyberhyoekkaeykset-kiihtyvaet-mutta-yritykset-voivat-vastata-niihin
Cyber attacks are accelerating, but companies can respond to them A new study by security firm Trend Micro predicts that the number of cyber attacks will increase, with a particular focus on IoT devices. At the same time in 2022 global organizations will be more vigilant and better prepared to face new cyber threats. Research, foresight, and automation are critical to risk management and employee protection. The shift of workers to telecommuting has opened up new avenues for attackers, so the attack area of companies and organizations has grown exponentially. Fortunately, hybrid work is becoming more established and more predictable, allowing security decision-makers to plan and refine their security strategies. Those are:
• Enhanced server security and application management policies to combat blackmail
• A risk-based update plan and an effort to detect security vulnerabilities in advance
• Improved basic protection for SMEs using cloud services
• Active network monitoring, especially in IoT environments
• Zero Trust security model to secure international supply chains
• Cloud security focused on the risks assessed by the DevOps team and industry best practices
• Advanced Detection and Response (XDR) model to detect attacks on large networks

Trend Micron raportti: tulevaisuudessa kaikki on vaarassa
https://etn.fi/index.php/13-news/12785-trend-micro-raportti-tulevaisuudessa-kaikki-on-vaarassa
Security company Trend Micro has released its 2030 future report. Videos also tell us what the world could look like at the beginning of the next decade. From the perspective of cyber threats and cybersecurity, the future looks bleak. By 2030, connectivity, or continuous online presence, will affect our daily lives on both a physical and mental level. At the same time, cyber threats are constantly evolving and abusing technological innovation in ever new ways.
Trend Micro hopes that this review will spark debate both within the security industry and in society at large. We can only prepare for the cyber challenges of the next decade by comprehensively anticipating all possible situations and advising how governments, the business world and individuals can prepare for them.
Project 2030
https://2030.trendmicro.com/?utm_campaign=ADC2021_Corporate_2030_Predictions&utm_medium=Press-Release&utm_source=Press-Release_Glimpse-into-future_PR&utm_content=Watch-video
Welcome to your new reality, more connected than ever to all the riches modern life has to offer, yet where truth has never been more insubstantial.

3,062 Comments

  1. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Bank had no firewall license, intrusion or phishing protection – guess the rest
    Crooks used RAT to hijack superusers at India’s Mahesh Bank, stole millions
    https://www.theregister.com/2022/04/05/mahesh_bank_no_firewall_attack/

    Reply
  2. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Analyysi: Ukrainan sota toi kyberaseet rintamalle, jolla ei ole rajoja – nyt verkkohyökkäyksiin varaudutaan kaikkialla, myös Suomessa
    https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-12386997

    Toistaiseksi Ukrainan sota ei ole näkynyt lisääntyneinä hyökkäyksinä Suomen verkkoympäristössä. Mutta kun kyberaseet on tuotu näyttämölle, niiden käyttö on todennäköistä, kirjoittaa Ylen toimittaja Teemu Hallamaa.

    Reply
  3. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Cybersecurity Mesh: IT’s Answer to Cloud Security
    With a properly functioning cybersecurity mesh architecture, one can guarantee safe, authorized access to data from any access point.
    https://www.darkreading.com/operations/cybersecurity-mesh-it-s-answer-to-cloud-security

    Reply
  4. Tomi Engdahl says:

    99% of cloud identities are overly permissive, opening door to attackers
    https://www.csoonline.com/article/3656793/99-of-cloud-identities-are-overly-permissive-misconfigured-iam-opening-door-to-attackers.html

    Palo Alto Unit 42 report highlights five threat groups targeting cloud infrastructure and reveals their credential-focused attack methods.

    Reply
  5. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The new era of 5G and cybersecurity risks
    https://cybernews.com/security/the-new-era-of-5g-and-cybersecurity-risks/

    2022 will be a liminal year for the use of 5G, the next generation of mobile connectivity.

    This year the number of global connections will cross one billion, sneaking over the landmark barrier during the next 12 months. From there, the use of 5G will skyrocket beyond two billion in 2024 and three billion in 2026. It’s all a way that the world is starting to connect with each other, using 5G connections that are speedier than the current generation of mobile connections.

    By 2025, more than one in five mobile connections worldwide will be 5G enabled, according to the GSMA, an industry body. It’s a paradigm shift for the world, and a new way of connecting that will help people transact business better as well as keep in touch with more multimedia-rich methods than currently exist.

    Reply
  6. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Apple and Meta shared data with hackers pretending to be law enforcement officials
    Both companies received phony emergency data requests
    https://www.theverge.com/2022/3/30/23003600/apple-meta-shared-data-hackers-pretending-law-enforcement-officials

    Reply
  7. Tomi Engdahl says:

    I’m a Scam Prevention Expert, and I Got Scammed
    https://www.lupinia.net/writing/tech/scammed.htm

    Reply
  8. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Hackers Increasingly Using ‘Browser-in-the-Browser’ Technique in Ukraine Related Attacks
    https://thehackernews.com/2022/03/hackers-increasingly-using-browser-in.html

    Reply
  9. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Hidden Eye: A Modern Phishing Tool
    An easy to use phishing tool that will allow you quickly build and create a phishing engagement in an attempt to capture credentials.
    https://johnjhacking.com/blog/hiddeneye/?s=04

    Reply
  10. Tomi Engdahl says:

    VPNs are digital ‘snake oil,’ expert claims — here’s why
    By Paul Wagenseil published 17 days ago
    Here’s the true pros and cons of VPNs
    https://www.tomsguide.com/news/vpn-big-claims-truth-shmoocon22

    Reply
  11. Tomi Engdahl says:

    A SERIES OF PATENT LAWSUITS IS CHALLENGING THE HISTORY OF MALWARE DETECTION
    Cybersecurity firm Webroot claims that competitors’ software infringes on a decades-old patent
    https://www.theverge.com/2022/4/12/22985527/webroot-opentext-patent-troll-lawsuit-malware-detection-endpoint-security

    InIn early March, cybersecurity firm Webroot and its parent company OpenText launched a series of patent litigation containing some eye-opening claims. Filed March 4th in the famously patentholder-friendly Western District of Texas court, the four lawsuits claim that techniques fundamental to modern malware detection are based on patented technology — and that the company’s competitors are infringing on intellectual property rights with their implementation of network security software.

    The defendants named in the suits are a who’s who of security companies: CrowdStrike, Kaspersky, Sophos, and Trend Micro are all named. According to OpenText, the companies are using patented technology in their anti-malware applications, specifically in the endpoint security systems that protect specific devices on a network. It’s a sweeping lawsuit that puts much of the security industry in immediate danger. And, for critics, it’s a bitter reminder of how much damage a patent troll can still do.

    “WE INVITE WEBROOT AND OPENTEXT TO JOIN THE RANKS OF SERIOUS CYBERSECURITY COMPANIES”

    So far, endpoint security companies have shown fierce opposition to the very idea of the case.

    Responses from Trend Micro COO Kevin Simzer and CrowdStrike’s senior director of corporate communications Kevin Benacci went further: both accused OpenText of “patent trolling” in statements sent to The Verge.

    Reply
  12. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Microsoft is adding a new driver-blocklist feature to Windows Defender on Windows 10 and 11
    Microsoft is adding a new security option to Windows Defender that is meant to help protect against malicious drivers on Windows 10 and 11 devices.

    https://www.zdnet.com/article/microsoft-is-adding-a-new-driver-blocklist-feature-to-windows-defender-on-windows-10-and-11/

    Reply
  13. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Success Storied: How to Advocate for Tech Policy Learning from the Cyberspace Solarium Commission, which achieved most of its ambitious wish list
    https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-policy-successes

    Reply
  14. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Behold, a password phishing site that can trick even savvy users
    Just when you thought you’d seen every phishing trick out there, BitB comes along.
    https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2022/03/behold-a-password-phishing-site-that-can-trick-even-savvy-users/

    Reply
  15. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Onko reitittimesi kaapattu? Selvitä asia muutamassa sekunnissa https://www.is.fi/digitoday/tietoturva/art-2000008736738.html

    Reply
  16. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Use a New IEEE Standard to Design a Safer Digital World For Kids
    The document outlines steps for building age-appropriate products
    https://spectrum.ieee.org/ieee-standard-protecting-kids-online

    Reply
  17. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Lockheed Martin signs deal to use SpiderOak cybersecurity to protect satellite networks
    https://spacenews.com/lockheed-martin-signs-deal-to-use-spideroak-cybersecurity-to-protect-satellite-networks/

    The OrbitSecure software uses blockchain for data transactions so every modification made to the ledger is time stamped and signed

    Reply
  18. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The Popular Family Safety App Life360 Is Selling Precise Location Data on Its Tens of Millions of Users
    The app is a major source of raw location data for a multibillion-dollar industry that buys, packages, and sells people’s movements
    https://themarkup.org/privacy/2021/12/06/the-popular-family-safety-app-life360-is-selling-precise-location-data-on-its-tens-of-millions-of-user

    Reply
  19. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Cloud Cost, Reliability Raise IT Concerns
    IT professionals worry most about cloud security, but other questions arise about training, functionality, and performance
    https://www.darkreading.com/tech-trends/cloud-cost-reliability-raise-it-concerns

    Reply
  20. Tomi Engdahl says:

    ‘Mute’ button in conferencing apps may not actually mute your mic
    https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/mute-button-in-conferencing-apps-may-not-actually-mute-your-mic/

    A new study shows that pressing the mute button on popular video conferencing apps (VCA) may not actually work like you think it should, with apps still listening in on your microphone.

    More specifically, in the studied software, pressing mute does not prevent audio from being transmitted to the apps’ servers, either continually or periodically.

    Due to this activity not being documented in related privacy policies, users have a poor understanding of how the mute system works, falsely assuming that audio input is cut when they activate it.

    Reply
  21. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Open source project Tea is brew2 for web3
    https://techcrunch.com/2022/03/23/open-source-project-tea-is-brew2-for-web3/

    Howell infamously tweeted about being rejected for a job at Google because he couldn’t answer a niche technical question by hand despite the fact that “90% of [Google’s] engineers” use the software he wrote. Since that 2015 tweet, compensation for open source developers has remained a hot-button issue, and popular developer platform GitHub launched a feature in 2019 that allows users to send tips to their favorite open source coders.

    Howell sees the rise of new projects in the web3 space as an opportunity to reshape how these open source developers are compensated for their work. To that end, he just announced the launch of a new venture called Tea that he co-founded alongside three fellow engineers, which he says will help reward open source programmers for their contributions to web3 projects. In a nod to Homebrew, Tea referred to itself as “brew2 for web3” in its announcement.

    Howell explained that volunteer open source programmers who create software that ends up being widely used often face pressure to iterate and troubleshoot the code they created without compensation for doing so. He cited the example of a cybersecurity vulnerability found in the popular Log4J open source tool, which, when discovered, prompted users to direct “quite a lot of hatred and anger” to the original developers.

    “They fixed the bug, but they pointed out quite fairly that no one sponsors their project or gives them any money in [exchange for] their free time,” Howell said.

    Open source developers often build a product or tool because they themselves need it, and they choose to share it for free with the broader community. Howell said this was his original motivation in launching Homebrew.

    “When an open source developer gives [their code] to the community, it becomes a vital part of the machinery that runs the internet, like a tower of blocks … suddenly, they’re obligated to maintain these things, or they’re breaking the internet,” he added.

    Through digital contracts, Tea aims to distribute value to open source devs in what Howell likened to a “loyalty scheme,” wherein sponsors of open source projects can receive perks such as special access to the project developers in return for their investment.

    Its product will automate the process for companies and individuals who use open source software to sponsor its developers. Howell hopes that Tea can play a role in helping the web3 ecosystem evolve in a direction more supportive of open source developers than the internet itself, or web2, did.

    “For 80 to 90% of most web2 companies, their stack is open source. They contribute a bit, they feel bad about it, but they have no good system for distributing that value to all of the open source they use. The amount of manpower that this would take is astronomical,” Howell said. “So here we are, proposing this new way of automating it for them to enough of an extent that they can actually help the ecosystem that they depend upon.”

    Tea’s value seems to lie in its ability to guarantee security and reliability to users of open source software projects, who in turn will be incentivized to compensate developers on Tea for those assurances. The software developed with Tea will remain free for users — a core tenet for much of the open source community — while developers will be able to earn compensation for their work indirectly, Howell said. This means that even if a sponsor doesn’t directly back a particular project, Tea’s “inflationary mechanism” will assess each project’s popularity within the community and allocate rewards proportionally across the Tea ecosystem.

    A developer who wants to participate in receiving rewards would complete their project and register it to a “graph,” or database, maintained by Tea. The graph will also register any dependencies the project relied on to be built, Howell explained.

    Once a project is built, Tea creates a new security layer that will notify both the users and owners of that project if something in its stack ends up being broken, he added.

    Those participating in the Tea ecosystem can reward developers by purchasing utility tokens associated with each project, which will give the participants access to special agreements with the project’s developers. For example, a token holder could be granted a license agreement in which the developers could guarantee they will provide ongoing support for the project.

    Tea will also feature a “slashing” mechanism, wherein control of a project can be transferred from one developer to another in the event that the project needs urgent support and its creator is unwilling or unable to provide it after a designated grace period, according to Howell.

    “We’re building this decentralized graph for open source, and we’re going to offer that to everybody,” Howell’s co-founder Tim Lewis told TechCrunch.

    “There are famous examples of open source developers yanking their packages from the internet, which caused development trouble, and sometimes, it’s kind of pernicious in the damages caused. While I respect the desire and freedom [of the developer] to do such things, we think the open source ecosystem is more important than one person’s bad day. So our graph is an immutable, decentralized and fundamentally much more secure way for open source to be stored in reference,” Lewis said.

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  22. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Linux core dumps contain the memory snapshot of the app when that app has crashed. It may collect sensitive information, such as passwords and encryption keys, so core dumps must be disabled on a production system. Learn how to disable them in Linux https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/disable-core-dumps-in-linux-with-systemd-sysctl/

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