Critical infrastructure is on the front line of cybersecurity.
An attack on power, sanitation, healthcare, or even the banking system, could be catastrophic. But it could happen.
Back in the 1990s, ethical hacker Joe Carson was already concerned about how a power outage could disrupt medical services.
Then, it was the Y2K bug that worried the experts.
Today it is state sponsored actors.
As chief security scientist and advisory CISO at Thycotic, Carson has pitted himself against CNI’s defences, and found them wanting.
But can, and should, we do more to create practices and norms to protect these vital services?
5G: Revolution or security risk?
Neurodiversity, neurodivergence, and cyber
Cyber’s $150bn black hole: operationalising cybersecurity
DDoS’ shifting focus: war, religion and politics
Why do we love weak passwords?
Risk or reward: can we control cyber risks?
Closing the skills gap – part 4: Michael Smith, Neustar
Closing the skills gap: part 3 - Karen Worstell, VMWare
Closing the security skills gap - Part 2: Tia Hopkins
Closing the security skills gap - part 1: Deryck Mitchelson
Surviving a ransomware attack
Security, SMEs, and new ways of working
Critical infrastructure, and geopolitical risk - Mathieu Gorge
Malware, security and the cloud
Red Teams and Cyber War
Surviving a crisis: the psychology of cyber attacks
Denial of service: attacks on the rise?
Is mobile a security weak spot?
Identity, deception and compromised credentials
The tale of a stolen iPad
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