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WiredThreatLevel.webp 2021-10-11 13:00:00 The Best Espresso Machines for the Home Barista (lien direct) Turning your kitchen into a café is a great way to learn (or hone) the art of making the perfect shot. APT 22
WiredThreatLevel.webp 2021-10-07 12:00:00 Flex Your Barista Skills With the Rancilio Silvia Pro (lien direct) The Silvia Pro brings the coffeehouse to your countertop, but at a steep price. APT 22
WiredThreatLevel.webp 2021-04-08 12:00:00 The 5 Best Portable Espresso Makers for a Shot on the Go (lien direct) Make a barista-worthy cup on the road, or anywhere else, with these handheld machines. APT 22
WiredThreatLevel.webp 2020-05-13 13:00:00 Baratza Vario-W Review: A Grinder for the Serious Coffee Brewer (lien direct) This programmable coffee grinder is the ultimate setup for serious home baristas, as long as you prefer brewing methods that require finer grinds. APT 22
WiredThreatLevel.webp 2020-02-03 12:00:00 Today\'s Cartoons: Robot Barista (lien direct) It's the little things. APT 22
WiredThreatLevel.webp 2019-06-20 12:00:00 Brim 8-Cup Pour-Over Coffee Maker Review: Barista-Style Brew Without All the Effort (lien direct) An automatic coffee machine that gives you a barista-style brew. APT 22
AlienVault.webp 2018-12-20 14:00:00 Let\'s Chat: Healthcare Threats and Who\'s Attacking (lien direct) Healthcare is under fire and there’s no sign of the burn slowing. Look, it’s no secret that hackers have been targeting hospitals and other healthcare providers for several years — and probably no surprise that healthcare is one of the top target industries for cybercrime in 2018. In the US alone, in fact, more than 270 data breaches affecting nearly 12 million individuals were submitted to the U.S. HHS Office for Civil Rights breach portal (as of November 30, 2018). This includes the likes of unauthorized access or disclosures of patient data, hacking, theft of data, data loss and more. Bottom line, if you’re tasked with protecting any entity operating in the healthcare sector, you’re likely experiencing some very sleepless nights — and may just need a doctor yourself. So . . . who’s wreaking all this havoc and how? According to AlienVault Labs, opportunistic ransomware is still a preferred method of attack. However, researchers are reporting a rise in the number of targeted ransomware attacks in the healthcare sector. These attacks are often backed by organized criminals who see opportunities for making money from healthcare providers and other similar entities who must protect and keep assets, systems, and networks continuously operating. One such criminal group operating the SamSam ransomware is thought to have earned more than $5 million dollars by manually compromising critical healthcare networks (see below for more info). The group behind SamSam has invested heavily in their operations (likely an organized crime syndicate) and has won the distinction of being the subjects of two FBI Alerts in 2018. And, according to AlienVault Labs, the methods used by SamSam are more akin to a targeted attack than typical opportunistic ransomware. SamSam attacks also seem to go in waves. One of the most notable was a spring 2018 hit on a large New York hospital which publicly declined to pay the attacker’s $44,000 ransomware demand. It took a month for the hospital’s IT system to be fully restored.   SamSam attackers are known to: Gain remote access through traditional attacks, such as JBoss exploits Deploy web-shells Connect to RDP over HTTP tunnels such as ReGeorg Run batch scripts to deploy the ransomware over machines SamSam isn’t going away either. AlienVault Labs has seen recent variants. You might want to read more about the threat actors behind SamSam, their methods of attacks, and recommendations for heading Threat Wannacry APT 19 APT 18 APT 22 APT 23
Chercheur.webp 2016-05-26 11:31:17 Suckfly (lien direct) No description APT 22
Last update at: 2024-05-04 14:08:27
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