By Jean Gordon Kocienda If you had asked me a few years ago, I might have predicted that the rise of large scale hacking and network-based Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs) would spell the end of old-school espionage (poison-tipped umbrellas, office break-ins, dangles and the like). Those of us who fancy ourselves logical, savvy cyber security specialists can be forgiven for thinking such analog antics wouldn’t persist in a digital world. And yet, human espionage remains a nagging issue. A Russian spy ring was disrupted in New York []

Source:: Cisco Security Notice

Source:: Innovaphone

Source:: Innovaphone

Source:: Innovaphone

Source:: Innovaphone

Source:: Innovaphone

Source:: Innovaphone

Source:: Innovaphone

Source:: Innovaphone

By Costas Kleopa We introduced OpenAppID in early 2014 with the goal of empowering customers and the open source community to control application usage in their network environments. Since then, we have increased our coverage from 1,000 OpenAppID detectors to more than 2,600, and have received valuable feedback from the community on ways to improve the product. The case of having an open, application-focused detection language and processing module for Snort has attracted the attention of the Internet of Everything (IoE) world. There are countless []

Source:: Cisco Security Notice