Google moves into the Certificate Authority business

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InfoWorld Network Report

Jan 31, 2017
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The end of net neutrality is bad for IT, too

The overwhelming majority of IT pros see no upside in deregulating the internet, according to a recent survey Read More

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Your Must-Read Stories

Google moves into the Certificate Authority business
OpenSSL issues new patches as Heartbleed still lurks
The real reason we can't secure the internet
MongoDB ransomware attacks sign criminals are going after servers, applications

Video/Webcast: Neustar Inc

2016: A Security Minefield - Will You Be Ready for 2017?

Ransomware. Politically-motivated hacking. Distributed denial-of-service - and now mega-DDoS attacks targeting the foundations of the Internet, thanks to vulnerabilities in the burgeoning Internet of Things. 2016 has been a landmark year for information security in many ways. What can we expect in 2017? Read More

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Google moves into the Certificate Authority business

Google doesn't seem to trust the current system, as it has launched its own security certificates Read More

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OpenSSL issues new patches as Heartbleed still lurks

The latest OpenSSL update may only address moderate-severity vulnerabilities, but admins shouldn't get lax about staying current with the patches Read More

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The real reason we can't secure the internet

We can surmount the technical and human obstacles to a dramatically more secure internet, but one factor stands in the way Read More

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MongoDB ransomware attacks sign criminals are going after servers, applications

Ransomware is lucrative, and attackers looking for new ways to extort enterprises are going after data stored on web and app servers, even SaaS apps Read More

White Paper: Neustar Inc

Cybersecurity Essentials for 2017

For cybersecurity professionals, 2016 presented a year of distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks that were unprecedented. Week after week, the public was inundated with news of hacks, attacks, and data leaks. It didn't take long for everybody to realize the old axiom of cybersecurity still holds true - there are two types of companies: those who are hacked and know about it, and those who are hacked and soon will find out. Read More

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