Thank you for subscribing to our Linux Security Week newsletter! In this weekly newsletter, we strive to provide readers with a comprehensive overview of the week’s most relevant open source security news. We want to provide you with the type of content you are interested in, and would love to hear your thoughts on this week's articles.
Today’s newsletter highlights our two most recent feature articles: Know the Enemy: Upgrade Your Threat Detection Strategy with Honeynets and New Report: Severe Flaws in Cyberoam’s Firewall and VPN Technology Left at Least 86,000 Networks Vulnerable to Exploit. We also examine various topics including getting started with GPG (GnuPG), leading open-source artificial intelligence projects, how to secure documents by encrypting compressed files on Linux using a password and how to secure your Linux system against unwanted access locally and across the network with eight helpful lockdown controls. Happy Memorial Day - and happy reading!
New Report: Severe Flaws in Cyberoams Firewall and VPN Technology Left At Least 86,000 Networks Vulnerable to Exploit - A new report published by vpnMentor examines two critical vulnerabilities in cybersecurity provider Cyberoam s firewall and VPN technology, which - both independently and combined - could be exploited by malicious actors to access the companys email quarantine system without authentication and remotely execute arbitrary commands. These flaws were discovered by different security researchers working independently, and have both been patched by Sophos .
Know The Enemy: Upgrade Your Threat Detection Strategy with Honeynets - Honeynets are an invaluable offensive security tool for learning the tactics and motives of the blackhat community and sharing the information and insights gathered. This article will explore what a Honeynet is, its value, how it works and the risks involved with deploying a Honeynet. It will also examine some great open-source honeynet options your organization may wish to consider.
scanbox: A powerful hacker toolkit (May 18) | ||
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Startpage private search engine now an option for Vivaldi browser (May 21) | ||
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Open Source Artificial Intelligence: Leading Projects (May 22) | ||
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Ten Crucial Privacy Statistics That May Surprise You (May 19) | ||
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Chrome 83 adds DNS-over-HTTPS support and privacy tweaks (May 21) | ||
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Mozilla, Twitter, Reddit join forces in effort to block browsing data from warrantless access (May 25) | ||
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