Prepare to be enlightened, engaged, and inspired to proactively protect yourself and your organization from cyber threats. This episode discusses why the human element poses a risk to organizations, how to keep organizations secure, and more.
Cyber Tide is a Cybercrime Magazine podcast series brought to you by Adlumin. Working to revolutionize the way organizations secure sensitive data, Adlumin finds the newest cracks being exploited and shines a light on correcting the issue in real-time, with expert guidance.
Dive beneath the surface of infamous cybersecurity attacks to learn the means and motives of cyber adversaries. In each episode, we invite an expert to reveal the contributing factors and costs of cyber incidents and how your firm can protect itself from business-disrupting cyberattacks.
Join co-hosts Mark Sangster, VP and Chief of Strategy, and Tim Evans, Cofounder, and EVP, as they interview Chief Operating Officer Vinod Paul from Align Managed Services in this episode of Cyber Tide.
Standard Club has merged with North to form NorthStandard. Find out more about NorthStandard here or continue on this site to access industry news, publications and expertise, as well as club rules and contacts.
The second episode of Alongside Season 2 is now available Episode 2: Cyber threats. In this episode, we look at the threat of cyber-attacks in the maritime industry. As the sector becomes more and more reliant on connected...
The second episode of Alongside Season 2 is now available Episode 2: Cyber threats. In this episode, we look at the threat of cyber-attacks in the maritime industry. As the sector becomes more and more reliant on connected technology, we ask how much of a threat is there and what needs to be done to counter those threats. Our host Kait Borsay is joined by Daniel Ng, CEO of Cyber Owl, a company which helps asset operators in the maritime and critical national infrastructure sectors manage cyber risks and ensure cyber compliance. We also hear from Georgie Furness-Smith, Senior Cyber Underwriter and Head of Maritime Cyber at AXIS Capital.
The episode starts off in Baltimore Maryland at 1:37 am when a couple is awakened from voices coming out of a baby-cam monitor that was apparently hacked and the infant (Caleb Reynolds) kidnapped. It was later discovered the foreign voices were from individuals bidding on the baby in an illegal auction.
The scene quickly shifts to Washington, DC where special agent Avery Ryan played by Patricia Arquette is surfing the web and receives an instant message about the Baltimore kidnapping. She meets with her boss Simon Sifter played by Peter MacNicol asking that the case be assigned to her group; Sifter states that the case has already been assigned to major crimes. Avery responds by saying:
The CTOC is the nerve center equipped with a lot of hi-tech devices; this is where the rest of the team is introduced (Daniel Krumitz played by Charley Koontz and Raven Ramirez played by Hayley Kiyoko) including Brody Nelson a black hat hacker that is working with the team played by Shad Moss aka Bow Wow.
From here the show takes us through numerous events such as the kidnappers being tracked down, they did not find baby Caleb, but they did find a lot of money in the trunk of the car they were driving. Before the team could interrogate the kidnappers, they were shot by a sniper, which Agent Mundo eventual killed. They were lucky enough to find evidence that led to additional information on locating the whereabouts of baby Caleb.
The show took us thought provoking interviews, holographic autopsy and a few additional shootouts. Every member of the team was able to solve various pieces of the puzzle to help advance the case until they were able to solve the crime at the end and rescue baby Caleb from a submerged car in the lake.
In this episode of School Choice Report, guest host Guy Ciarrocchi interviews Don Asplen, CEO of Achievement House Cyber Charter School. They discuss what cyber charter schools are as well as their benefits. Currently, nearly 70,000 Pennsylvania children attend one of the fourteen cyber schools in the Commonwealth. They are at the forefront of the fastest growing sector of education in Pennsylvania.
Lexi Mellish Mingo is a multi-disciplinary artist living and creating on the unceded and unsurrendered territories of the Tsleil-Waututh, Squamish, and Musqueam Nations. Descending from both Afro-Guyanese, English and Scottish ancestry, her work is inspired by the complexity of diasporic experiences, and the process of place making, through community collaboration and dialogue.
Karmella Benedito De Barros is an inner-city Indigiqueer with Mistawasis Treaty 6 and Afro-Brazilian ancestry. They are a Multidisciplinary Artist and Community Worker born and raised in diaspora as a guest on the unceded Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh, and Musqueam territories. Karmella currently co-leads the BIPOC Art Ecosystem project, and is the Indigenous Brilliance Community Engagement leader. They also support Earthseed: a Parable of the Sower Book Club with the Lucid Arts Collective.
In this episode, we ask What can gardening teach us about futurisms and community care? As well as, In what ways do online spaces inspire growth and in what ways does it stifle us? This episode is an offering to ground in imagination and dreaming of better futures for QTBIPOC online and offline.
I also wanna bring into the space the energy and spirit of Alannah Johnson, who is my other co-founder and who is not able to make it here today, but is the other half of Hush Harbour Press, my ride or die, partner in crime, and partner in publishing as well. Yeah, the two of us make up Hush Harbour.
And so I would like to invite us all to just meditate on this idea of seed sowing and saving and sowing seeds through times of slavery as a form of ancestral futurism and then think on the ways in which colonial displacement from land forces us into cyberspace and into this place where we can practice our own seed saving and cyber gardening through sharing stories and connecting in community online as future ancestors. And just imagining in the future, people looking back on podcast recordings like this, or on projects like Speech Sounds or on a recording of an Art Ecosystem workshop, or on our Instagram accounts, or on our weird little Google Docs.These are all artifacts that will be stored in cyberspace forever.
So, just, I guess, wanting to ask the question of in what ways do you see seed saving and sowing seeds in an online space as sacred and as relevant and how does this metaphor speak to you? What does it make you think of? What did you think of the article? Just opening that to the two of you.
Wow, yeah. So with that, our next question is how do you balance an active imagination and ability to practice dreaming up futurisms while also acknowledging the reality of our current culture, communities, and lives, which we aim to transform and grow into something better.
I love that! Yeah, I really appreciate futurism and futuring being mundane as well as being this brilliant, awesome, exciting, new thing that it can also be. Like you were saying, going to the farmers market and having a good conversation. Resting. I feel like just finding joy and nourishment and energy in the mundane allows us to maintain a space of grounding and safety and security to be able to dream of futures and then to work towards them.
ROOM 47.3 BODIES
Join Room in a deep dive on the body: touch and isolation, trans and queer embodiment, fat liberation, chronic illness and disability, brutality, sensuality, and other meditations on the bones and muscles you inhabit every day.
In episode 2 of The Security Detail, Liz Wharton, attorney and founder of Silver Key Strategies, discusses her research on using large language models (LLMs) to analyze SEC 8-K filings and other public reporting to gain cybersecurity insights. The interview also covers the heightened liability security executives face when reporting material incidents to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
In episode 1 of Season 3 of The Security Detail, Tom Marsland, board chair of VetSec, explains how the non-profit helps veterans and transitioning military members find employment in the industry.
Season 2 of The Security Detail kicks off with an inside look at Cyber Coalition 2023, NATO's flagship cyber defense exercise. Audra Streetman traveled to Tallinn, Estonia to tour the exercise and interview creators and participants about the knowledge and collaboration needed to defend the Alliance from cyber threats.
Water treatment facilities are part of the critical infrastructure that supports essential services. A cyberattack on these facilities could disrupt the supply of clean water, leading to severe consequences for public health, safety, and the economy. In this episode, two representatives from the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, or CISA, share strategies to defend the water sector from cyberattacks. They also provide an update on CISA's investigation into an Iranian-linked campaign targeting Israeli-made Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs) at a number of US water utilities.
Cybersecurity is crucial for journalists and newsrooms to safeguard sensitive information, protect sources, and ensure the integrity of their reporting in an increasingly digital and interconnected media landscape. Episode 3 of The Security Detail features an interview with Runa Sandvik, a security researcher and founder of Granitt, a consulting firm that focuses on digital security for journalists and other at-risk people.
In this episode of The Security Detail, we explore the complex domain of election cybersecurity with Marci Andino, senior director of the Election Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center (EI-ISAC). From international interference threats to localized phishing attacks, discover the varied challenges election offices face and the strategies deployed to safeguard the integrity of electoral processes.
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