Hacking Washing Machines - PSW #885
In the security news: Hacking washing machines, good clean fun! Hacking cars via Bluetooth More Bluetooth hacking with Breaktooth Making old vulnerabilities great again: exploiting abandoned hardware Clorox and Cognizant point fingers AI generated Linux malware Attacking Russian airports When user verification data leaks Turns out you CAN steal cars with a Flipper Zero, so we're told The UEFI vulnerabilities - the hits keep coming Hijacking Discord invites The Raspberry PI laptop The new Hack RF One Pro Security appliances still fail to be secure Person Re-Identification via Wi-Fi Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-885
Aligning Security Objectives, Ditch the Ego, Lead for Real and Succeed - BSW #406
In the leadership and communications section, The CISO code of conduct: Ditch the ego, lead for real, The books shaping today’s cybersecurity leaders, How to Succeed in Your Career When Change Is a Constant, and more! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/bsw-406
Popup Porn, LoveSense, Tea, Fire Ant, Scatterede Spider, AI Pricing, Josh Marpet... - SWN #498
Popup Porn, LoveSense, Tea, Fire Ant, Scatterede Spider, AI Pricing, Josh Marpet, and more on the Security Weekly News. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/swn-498
How Product-Led Security Leads to Paved Roads - Julia Knecht - ASW #341
A successful strategy in appsec is to build platforms with defaults and designs that ease the burden of security choices for developers. But there's an important difference between expecting (or requiring!) developers to use a platform and building a platform that developers embrace. Julia Knecht shares her experience in building platforms with an attention to developer needs, developer experience, and security requirements. She brings attention to the product management skills and feedback loops that make paved roads successful -- as well as the areas where developers may still need or choose their own alternatives. After all, the impact of a paved road isn't in its creation, it's in its adoption. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw-341
tj-actions Lessons Learned, US Cyber Offense, this week's enterprise security news - Dimitri Stiliadis - ESW #417
Interview Segment - Lessons Learned from the tj-actions GitHub Action Supply Chain Attack with Dimitri Stiliadis Breach analysis is one of my favorite topics to dive into and I’m thrilled Dimitri is joining us today to reveal some of the insights he’s pulled out of this GitHub Actions incident. It isn’t an overstatement to say that some of the lessons to be learned from this incident represent fundamental changes to how we architect development environments. Why are we talking about it now, 4 months after it occurred? In the case of the Equifax breach, the most useful details about the breach didn’t get released to the public until 18 months after the incident. It takes time for details to come out, but in my experience, the learning opportunities are worth the wait. Topic Segment - Should the US Go on the Cyber Offensive? Triggered by an op-ed from Dave Kennedy, the discussion of whether the US should launch more visible offensive cyber operations starts up again. There are a lot of factors and nuances to discuss here, and a lot of us have opinions here. We'll see if we can do any of it justice in 15 minutes. News Segment Finally, in the enterprise security news, We discuss the latest fundings a few acquisitions a vibe coding campfire story how to hack AI agents zero-days in AI coding apps more AI zero days why Ivanti vulns are still alive and well in Japan how wiper commands made their way into Amazon’s AI coding agent it seems like vulnerabilities and AI are pairing up in this week’s news stories! All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-417