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Latest coverage for Sanctions

Sanctions shape cybersecurity by restricting transactions, technology access, and support linked to cyber operations and critical infrastructure risks.

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Sanctions are legal restrictions imposed by governments or international bodies on dealings with specified countries, organizations, individuals, or activities. They can limit payments, exports, imports, access to services, or provision of technical assistance; the exact prohibitions, exceptions, and licensing rules depend on the relevant jurisdiction. Cyber-related designations may identify operators, companies, or intermediaries linked to malicious activity, but sanctions are legal measures rather than technical indicators of compromise.

For security practitioners, sanctions create operational requirements around counterparties and technology flows. Organizations may need to screen customers, suppliers, service providers, and payment recipients, including aliases and ownership links, and restrict access or support where law requires. Export-control and sanctions rules can also affect distribution of cryptographic products, exploit research, cloud services, and incident-response assistance. Threat intelligence can help map sanctioned entities and evasion networks, while vulnerability-management and response teams should preserve records showing who received software, credentials, or technical help. Because lists and licensing conditions change, automated controls need human review and documented escalation rather than treating a name match as conclusive.

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Bank Info Security 8 months, 2 weeks ago

How to Block North Korean IT Worker Scams in Remote Hiring

Attorney Jonathan Armstrong on Vetting Job Applicants, Red Flags and ComplianceNorth Korean operatives are using fake identities and remote job listings to bypass sanctions and infiltrate companies. But employers can avoid becoming unwitting accomplices, said legal expert Jonathan Armstrong, who advises firms to adopt stronger vetting practices and structured investigations.

Fake views from Moscow's pet media outlets appear in about one in five responses Popular chatbots powered by large language models cited links to Russian state-attributed sources in up to a quarter of answers about the war in Ukraine, raising fresh questions over whether AI risks undermining efforts to enforce sanctions on Moscow-backed media.…