SC Podcasts
2012 Luminary Podcast: Chris Soghoian
Chris Soghoian, who was recently hired as the ACLU's first-ever principal technologist, has never been afraid to ruffle the feathers of the corporate establishment when it comes to privacy and security issues.
2012 Luminary Podcast: Valerie Aurora and Mary Gardiner
Valerie Aurora and Mary Gardiner have united to form a decade-long collaboration on a variety of "women in open source" advocacy projects, including developing anti-harassment policies at conferences.
2012 Luminary Podcast: Ron Ross
Ron Ross is helping to lead the development of new standards and controls that security professionals can use to safeguard their organizations against today's internet threat paradigms.
2012 Luminary Podcast: Michael Coates
Michael Coates, director of security assurance at Mozilla and chairman of OWASP, is a steadfast supporter of open-source methods to safeguard users against security and privacy threats.
2012 Luminary Podcast: Gabriella Coleman
Gabriella Coleman, professor at McGill University in Montreal and avid observer of the Anonymous online collective, has become one of the pre-eminent thought leaders on the hacktivist culture.
The anatomy of a Facebook gift card scam
Software architect Troy Hunt explains how a common Facebook spam campaign functions.
Podcast: Inside look at Black Hat 2012
To get a better understanding of how the show is shaping up, we caught up with Trey Ford, the newly appointed general manager of Black Hat, who discussed his transformation from booth babe to conference organizer, how the numbers stack up this year, which sessions are on his can't-miss list and why the parties are just as important to attend as daytime talks.
Podcast: Never mind Flame, IXESHE is sophisticated
Tom Kellermann, vice president of cyber security at Trend Micro, joined me on the SC Magazine podcast to discuss an APT campaign known as IXESHE, which is going after sensitive targets from Asia to Germany. But its command-and-control infrastructure really is what makes it special.
Podcast: The probability of a data breach lawsuit
If a data breach occurs, when are companies more likely to be sued by consumers or employees? A Carnegie Mellon University researcher joined me on the SC Magazine Podcast to discuss.
Podcast: Security awareness training and rewarding good behavior
Awareness training is finally becoming more about security and less about compliance, as SANS instructor Lance Spitzner discusses in this SC Magazine Podcast episode.
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SC Magazine Articles
- Women in IT Security: 10 Power Players
- Report: Phishing costs average organization $3.7 million per year
- Scanner identifies thousands of malicious Android apps on Google Play, other markets
- Women in IT Security: Women of influence
- DARPA seeks to develop program that drastically improves DDoS defense
- DOJ issues new 'stingray' policies and begins requiring a warrant
- Outdated websites deliver TeslaCrypt via Neutrino Exploit Kit: Heimdal
- Scammers and schemers look to cash in on Ashley Madison breach
- ACLU asks DOJ to withhold funds for LAPD body cams
- A question of balance between security solutions and the people who use it
