| LATEST SECURITY NEWS & COMMENTARY | 10 Things InfoSec Pros Can Celebrate About 2016 There were a few items that passed for good news this year. White House Announces Retaliatory Measures For Russian Election-Related Hacking 35 Russian intelligence operatives ejected from the US, and two of the "Cyber Most Wanted" are frozen out by Treasury Department. Another Massive DDoS Closes Out 2016, But Mirai Not To Blame Using a new malware variant called Leet, the 650 Gbps DDoS attack matched Mirai's floods of traffic. Threat Actors Bring Ransomware To Industrial Sector With New Version of KillDisk Disk-erasing malware has been tweaked to encrypt data instead and to ask for a Bitcoin payment. 21 Biggest Cybercriminal Busts Of 2016 This year has been a tornado of major cyberattacks and hacker arrests. Here, we look back on the 21 most interesting 'cyberbusts' of 2016. Greatest Hits Of 2016: Readers' Picks For The Years' Best Commentary Here's what topped the Dark Reading page-view charts from the security industry's brightest minds, coolest rock stars, and up-and-coming leaders. How Artificial Intelligence Will Solve The Security Skills Shortage Unlike industries that fear the intrusion of AI, the infosec world is embracing this revolutionary technology, and the seismic changes it will bring to threat detection and mitigation. 8 Boldest Security Predictions For 2017 Scary, funny and maybe even a little outlandish, these industry predictions come from prognosticators who didn't mince words. MORE NEWS & COMMENTARY | | |
|
Dark Reading Weekly -- Published By InformationWeek UBM Tech 2 Penn Plaza, 15th Floor, New York, NY 10121 | To update your profile, change your e-mail address, or unsubscribe, cick here. | To opt-out of any future Dark Reading Weekly Newsletter emails, please respond here. | Thoughts about this newsletter? Give us feedback. |
Keep This Newsletter Out Of Your SPAM Folder Don't let future editions go missing. Take a moment to add the newsletter's address to your anti-spam white list: | If you're not sure how to do that, ask your administrator or ISP. Or check your anti-spam utility's documentation. | We take your privacy very seriously. Please review our Privacy Statement. |
|
|