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Showing posts with label cybersecurity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cybersecurity. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 9, 2021
Tuesday, August 4, 2020
WEBINAR REMINDER - 79 Netgear Router Models Are Vulnerable to Malicious HTTP Requests.
REMINDER - RED SKY ALLIANCE WEDNESDAY MORNING LIVE CYBER BRIEF WEBINAR August 5th, 2020 at 9:30 EST
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/8782169210544615949 TOP TOPIC: 79 Netgear Router Models Are Vulnerable to Malicious HTTP Requests. In January, Netgear was alerted about remote code execution vulnerability in 79 models of their routers. Netgear issued hotfixes for 34 of them, but the majority of the models will never be secured. Netgear refers to “outside security support period” reasoning, but some of the 'forever vulnerable' models are still available in retail. Join us and find out more
Monday, June 19, 2017
U.S. Corporate Concerns with China’s New Cybersecurity Law

- Definition of network operators. The scope of the Cybersecurity Law provides control over not just telecom operators and internet firms but also banking institutions, insurance companies, securities companies, providers of cybersecurity products and services, and essentially any enterprise with a website in China or that provides network services. The American Chamber of Commerce in China has said the Law “will impact almost every company that operates in China.”
- Requirements for “critical information infrastructure” operators. The Law defines these to include “public communications and information services, energy, finance, transportation, water conservation, public services, e-governance,” and other enterprises that could harm national security or the economy if damaged. Foreign corporations included in this category now face restrictions on equipment and services they can use, and they are vulnerable to inspection and intrusion by the Chinese government.
- Restrictions on sending data outside China. The Law states that “personal information and other important data from operations within the PRC shall be stored within mainland China.” Business information and data on Chinese citizens cannot be transferred abroad without permission, and that would be contingent on intrusive “security assessments” by the Chinese government. Some U.S. analysis suggests that this could also prohibit the export of economic, technological, or scientific data considered to “pose a threat to national security or the public interest.”
Wapack Labs has cataloged and reported extensively on China's cybersecurity in the past. An archive of related reporting can be found in the Red Sky Alliance portal.
Labels:
China,
corporations,
cyber,
cybersecurity,
government,
intelligence,
law,
US
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