Posts

Showing posts from July, 2019

Dashboards to Use on Palo Alto Networks for Effective Management

Image
Enterprises should expect to see  more cyber attacks  launched against them. The data that they now gather and store have made their infrastructures key targets for hackers. Customer data and intellectual property can be sold in the black market for profit, and sensitive information can also be used by hackers to extort them. Enterprises are now aggressively shifting their workloads  to the cloud  which, while it has many benefits, expands their defensive perimeter and exposes them to further risks as well. As such, organizations are now widely investing in various security solutions in order to comprehensively protect their networks. Gartner expects security spending to  exceed $124 billion  this year. Solutions such as firewalls and threat prevention tools have increasingly become essential for enterprises. Leading firewall provider  Palo Alto Networks , for example, provides companies with various measures to protect their infrastructures. It's currently being used by tens of th

Marriott Faces $123 Million GDPR Fine Over Starwood Data Breach

Image
After  fining British Airways  with a record fine of £183 million earlier this week, the UK's data privacy regulator is now planning to slap world's biggest hotel chain  Marriott International  with a £99 million ($123 million) fine under GDPR over 2014 data breach. This is the second major penalty notice in the last two days that hit companies for failing to protect its customers' personal and financial information compromised and implement adequate security measures. In November 2018,  Marriott discovered  that unknown hackers compromised their guest reservation database through its Starwood hotels subsidiary and walked away with personal details of approximately 339 million guests. The compromised database leaked guests' names, mailing addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, dates of birth, gender, arrival and departure information, reservation date, and communication preferences. The breach, which likely happened in 2014, also exposed unencrypted passport numbers

Microsoft Releases July 2019 Security Updates, 2 Flaws Under Active Attack

Image
Microsoft today released its monthly batch of software security updates for the July month to patch a total of 77 vulnerabilities, 14 are rated Critical, 62 are Important, and 1 is rated Moderate in severity. The  July 2019 security updates  include patches for various supported versions of Windows operating systems and other Microsoft products, including Internet Explorer, Edge, Office, Azure DevOps, Open Source Software, .NET Framework, Azure, SQL Server, ASP.NET, Visual Studio, and Exchange Server. Details of 6 security vulnerabilities, all rated important, were made public before a patch was released, none of which were found being exploited in the wild. However, two new privilege escalation vulnerabilities, one affects all supported versions of the Windows operating system, and the other affects Windows 7 and Server 2008, have been reported as being actively exploited in the wild. Both actively exploited vulnerabilities lead to elevation of privilege, one (CVE-2019-1132) of which