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Explore the latest frameworks in information security. Stay updated on guidelines to protect your digital assets and ensure data privacy.

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Background for this topic.

A security framework is an organized set of principles, practices, and controls for managing information and technology risk. Frameworks such as the NIST Cybersecurity Framework, ISO/IEC 27001, and COBIT help organizations structure activities including identifying assets and risks, protecting systems, detecting events, responding to incidents, and recovering operations. They are reference models rather than automatically effective security programs: an organization must select and implement measures appropriate to its systems, threats, and risk tolerance.

Practitioners use frameworks to assign responsibilities, prioritize vulnerability remediation, assess suppliers and cloud services, and document why particular controls are in place. They also provide a common vocabulary for audits, regulatory or contractual evidence, and measuring improvement over time. News under this tag may concern revisions to framework requirements, mappings between frameworks, assessment findings, or failures caused by treating a framework checklist as proof that controls work. A framework can guide governance and security operations, but it does not replace technical testing, continuous monitoring, or judgment about specific attack surfaces.

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The threat actor linked to the exploitation of the recently disclosed security flaws in Microsoft SharePoint Server is using a bespoke command-and-control (C2) framework called AK47 C2 (also spelled ak47c2) in its operations

Bank Info Security 11 months, 2 weeks ago

Coyote Trojan Turns Accessibility Into Attack Surface

Brazil-Targeting Malware Exploits Windows UIA to Evade DetectionA banking Trojan long confined to Brazil has become the first known malware to exploit Microsoft's UI Automation framework to extract credentials, signaling a new tactic that may evade conventional detection. Akamai's findings point to a growing trend of attackers using legitimate system features.

React conquered XSS? Think again. That's the reality facing JavaScript developers in 2025, where attackers have quietly evolved their injection techniques to exploit everything from prototype pollution to AI-generated code, bypassing the very frameworks designed to keep applications secure

Cybersecurity researchers have discovered over a dozen security vulnerabilities impacting Tridium's Niagara Framework that could allow an attacker on the same network to compromise the system under certain circumstances