These two things together. Take my money!
Hacker’s Movie Guide: The Complete List of Hacker and Cybersecurity Movies by Steven C. Morgan, Connor S. Morgan
These two things together. Take my money!
Hacker’s Movie Guide: The Complete List of Hacker and Cybersecurity Movies by Steven C. Morgan, Connor S. Morgan
This came up when it was mentioned to me a data dictionary for insider threats. Coming from data governance I had only considered these being about databases, tables and columns, when this was more about building a library of information around past incidents so that information can be used to help with insider threats in the future, build models, etc.
Searching for information around this I ran into Sarah Miller’s (Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, CERT) presentation, titled Leveraging Insider Threat Incident Data and Information Sharing for Increased Organizational Resiliency, which is a great primer and lead me to further information.
Still learning here but there are a few things I need to do further research on:
OpenIOC is an open framework, meant for sharing threat intelligence information in a machine-readable format. It was developed by the American cybersecurity firm MANDIANT in November 2011. It is written in eXtensible Markup Language (XML) and can be easily customized for additional intelligence so that incident responders can translate their knowledge into a standard format. Organizations can leverage this format to share threat-related latest Indicators of Compromise (IoCs) with other organizations, enabling real-time protection against the latest threats.
https://cyware.com/educational-guides/cyber-threat-intelligence/what-is-open-indicators-of-compromise-openioc-framework-ed9d
OpenIOC is about sharing information. In some cases I think it would be beneficial to store this information privately if it contains sensitive information to particular breaches that happened to your organization, that you may not want to publicize, but still use for anticipating future incidents in your organization. While sharing outside the organization is ideal, some information must of course be held back.
The others listed above seem to be all protocols or language/syntax to convey this information and not actual tools of databases containing libraries of incidents.
Next step, further research, especially Splunk.
This is the best video I could find on the subject and I’m still not sure I really get it. But it seems complicated so I don’t feel that bad. I’ll post more as I learn more.
Watch 6 amazingly well produced youtube videos about cybersecurity and how Google does cybersecurity. Absolutely fascinating and worth the time! Loved this series and wish there was more! Playlist link.
The dark web is a part of the internet that isn’t indexed by search engines. Basically if you can find a site on google, you are not on the dark web. So, if google doesn’t index it then how do you find it?
Navigating the dark web requires the a browser called Tor. Tor routes your data through many different proxies, hiding your IP. However, because it is doing all this with every request is slows down your experience on the web greatly.
What is the difference between the Dark Web and the Deep Web?
Deep web refers to anything on the internet that is not indexed by and, therefore, accessible via a search engine like Google. Deep web content includes anything behind a paywall or requires sign-in credentials. It also includes any content that its owners have blocked web crawlers from indexing. CSO Online
The dark web is where bad guys buy and sell your stolen identity information for example. Check out the linked CSO Online article above for more great information.