Security news aggregator

Latest coverage for SolarWinds

SolarWinds is associated with software supply-chain security, network management tools, and the 2020 compromise that affected public and private organizations.

4 headlines in this view

Refine the feed

Search across headline titles and summaries.

Tag briefing

Background for this topic.

SolarWinds is a software company whose IT-management and network-monitoring products are used to administer systems and collect operational data. In security news, the tag commonly covers its products, vulnerabilities, and the 2020 Orion supply-chain compromise, in which attackers inserted malicious code into legitimate software updates; selected downstream customers were then targeted.

The central security concern is that management software often has broad network visibility and administrative access, making its build pipeline, update mechanism, and deployment environment high-value attack surfaces. Organizations should distinguish the Orion compromise from separately reported product vulnerabilities, maintain an inventory of affected versions, apply verified fixes, and restrict management servers’ privileges and outbound communications. Monitoring unusual authentication, remote administration, or connections from management infrastructure can support detection, while threat intelligence and incident response may be needed to assess whether a compromised update was installed and what systems it could reach.

Showing 4 most recent headlines Filtered view
Bank Info Security 1 year, 5 months ago

SolarWinds to Be Purchased By Turn/River Capital for $4.4B

CEO: Going Private Will Help SolarWinds Expand Its Operational Resilience VisionSolarWinds agreed to be bought by Turn/River Capital for $4.4 billion just six years after the observability and IT management software firm went public. The proposed deal will help SolarWinds expand its vision in operational resilience and ensure the company's IT infrastructure remains robust.

When cloud customers don't clean up after themselves, part 97 Abandoned AWS S3 buckets could be reused to hijack the global software supply chain in an attack that would make Russia's "SolarWinds adventures look amateurish and insignificant," watchTowr Labs security researchers have claimed.…