CyberWire Daily

A podcast by CyberWire, Inc.

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2656 Episodes

  1. Ukraine says it blocked a second wave of NotPetya attacks. Notes on hybrid warfare and the challenges of sharing data. Will the EU get a right to repair?

    Published: 7/6/2017
  2. Recovering from NotPetya. State-actor seen behind wiper attack. Ukraine mulls criminal negligence charges. Documents behind US Congressional wariness of Kaspersky.

    Published: 7/5/2017
  3. Recovery and attribution: Petya/Nyetya/NotPetya. Cyber conflict and collective defense. Online inspiration and online censorship. The EU's regulatory big stick. Vishing Parliament.

    Published: 7/3/2017
  4. What's up with Petya/Nyetya/NotPetya? It's a wiper—the extortion is just misdirection. WikiLeaks dumps "OutlawCountry" from Vault7. The ShadowBrokers raise prices. Russia says boo to cybercrime.

    Published: 6/30/2017
  5. Ransomware, nyet; wiper, da. Shipping, manufacturing, and Big Law may share some common risks. WikiLeaks and the ShadowBrokers are back again.

    Published: 6/29/2017
  6. IoT 2017 – Securing the Things: A CyberWire Special Edition

    Published: 6/29/2017
  7. Petya/PetrWrap/Goldeneye updates.

    Published: 6/28/2017
  8. Petya goes WannaCry one better. Westminster email hack. ISIS in Maryland and Ohio websites.

    Published: 6/27/2017
  9. Brute-forcing Parliament. Election hacking retaliation? Cyberspies hunt IP in East Asia. Microsoft security issues. ISIS hacktivists deface Ohio websites. 

    Published: 6/26/2017
  10. Vault7 leak: Brutal Kangaroo toolkit. Data breach and ransomware updates. Notes on code audit requirements.

    Published: 6/23/2017
  11. WannaCry's back and the industrial IoT's got it. Business email scams hit the unwary (and most of would count as unwary). Testimony on Russian election influence operations. Grid security.

    Published: 6/22/2017
  12. Investigation, introspection, watchdogs, and leakers. The risk of collecting and storing data. 

    Published: 6/21/2017
  13. Who's behind the Android malware infestations? Mirai and Erbus updates. Industry notes. Brussels takes the pro-crypto side in the crypto wars. CrashOverride as a weapon. IG report on NSA insider threat management.

    Published: 6/20/2017
  14. Bouncing bad adware apps from Google Play. More on WannaCry attribution. Voter data exposed on an Amazon S3 account. Assessment of Russian influence on UK elections: they didn't do it. (Didn't need to?) Hackers sentenced.

    Published: 6/19/2017
  15. More from Vault7. How and why the DPRK hacks. FIN10 hits North American businesses with extortion demands. UK unis sustain ransomware infestation. Free decryptors are out, and ISACs seem to be working.

    Published: 6/16/2017
  16. Hidden Cobra strikes from Pyongyang. Microsoft patches last of ShadowBrokers' leaked exploits. Sanctions coming over Russian election influence operations. Electrical and natural gas sectors brace for CrashOverride.

    Published: 6/15/2017
  17. A CrashOverride update from Robert M. Lee. Patch news. Terrorist funding goes cyber. Cozy and Fancy Bear were more active than earlier believed.

    Published: 6/14/2017
  18. CrashOverride update. Influence ops harder to disrupt than infrastructure. Samba exploited for cryptocurrency mining. NSO Group for sale. Botnets and fake news. Airliner laptop bans.

    Published: 6/13/2017
  19. CrashOverride implicated in Ukraine grid hack—possibly as a proof-of-concept. Hack-induced Gulf diplomatic troubles continue. New malware strains, exploits appear.

    Published: 6/12/2017
  20. Comey's testimony calls Russian election influence operations massive and ongoing. New Android malware. Malicious hyperlinks infect with a mouse-over. Data privacy issues.

    Published: 6/9/2017

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The daily cybersecurity news and analysis industry leaders depend on. Published each weekday, the program also includes interviews with a wide spectrum of experts from industry, academia, and research organizations all over the world.