Last week, the founders of Basecamp released a privacy-focused email service named "Hey." Unlike Gmail, it's not free — it's a subscription service with plans starting at $99/year. The app is available for web, Windows, and Android platforms. The Mac and iOS versions, however, have drawn the ire of Apple's App Store Review board over the lack of in-app purchases.
More than half of companies report using no less than 25 different security tools — and nearly one of five uses at least 50. Hackers, on the other hand, flock to dark web markets for cheap tools that are easy to deploy at scale. What if companies worked together using an open source model for incident prevention and response?
It may have been easy to spot bots before, but they are more human than ever, making them nearly indistinguishable from real users. Cybercriminals know this, and create bot armies to target web applications. Abusing the sign-up process, scraping website or launching DDoS attacks are common goals — but what can you do to defend against an almost infinite foe?
MITRE, a not-for-profit organization, has defined an adversarial tactics, techniques and common knowledge (ATT&CK) framework. This framework creates a universal methodology and terminology for classifying and responding to more than 150 attack techniques, which have been sorted into eleven different categories. This white paper explains how adopting the MITRE ATT&CK framework can speed up your response to potential attacks.