⚡ Weekly Recap: Linux Flaws, Defender 0-Days, Router Botnets, and Supply Chain Chaos
Monday recap. Same mess, new week
Stay informed on the latest in Supply Chain Information Security. Safeguard your business from threats originating in your supply chain network.
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Background for this topic.
Supply Chain is the interconnected network of entities, people, processes, information, and resources involved in producing a product or service and delivering it to the end consumer. In the context of information security, this term highlights the emerging risks and vulnerabilities that can affect the security posture of an organization through its external partners, suppliers, and service providers.
Securing the supply chain is crucial because a single weak link can compromise the integrity and security of the entire system. As organizations often rely on third-party vendors for various components and services, ensuring these third parties adhere to stringent cybersecurity standards is vital. Supply chain security encompasses rigorous vendor risk assessments, continual monitoring for threats, and establishing robust incident response protocols that include third-party entities in the event of a breach.
With the increasing interconnectivity of systems, cyber attacks exploiting supply chain vulnerabilities have become more sophisticated, including software supply chain attacks where malicious code is inserted into legitimate software. Consequently, maintaining a secure supply chain is a critical aspect of an organization's overall cybersecurity strategy.
Weekly headline count for the current query.
Monday recap. Same mess, new week
Everything is still on fire
Everything is dumb again. This week feels broken in a very familiar way. Old tricks are back. New tools are doing shady crap. Supply chains got hit. Fake help desks worked. Weird research showed how easy some attacks still are
You scroll past one incident and see another that feels familiar, like it should have been fixed years ago, but it still works with small changes. Same bugs. Same mistakes
You know that feeling when you open your feed on a Thursday morning and it's just... a lot? Yeah. This week delivered. We've got hackers getting creative in ways that are almost impressive if you ignore the whole "crime" part, ancient vulnerabilities somehow still ruining people's days, and enough supply chain drama to fill a season of television nobody asked for