187 research outputs found

    Guest Editorial

    Full text link

    Foreword and editorial

    Full text link

    Information Security for BYOD in ABB

    Get PDF
    BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) is the future policy in companies that is going to replace the old UWYT (Use What You Are Told) way of thinking. This new policy has a lot of issues both security wisely and policy wisely that needs to get solved before we can fully implement this policy into larger companies. Thanks to large interest in the subject a lot of companies have already come up with solutions to this issue and started to use BYOD policy within their companies. The main target of this Master´s Thesis “Information Security for BYOD in ABB” was to create a working information security system for future BYOD policy use in ABB. For the Thesis we used six different test users with different portable devices and statuses and tried to create a policy that fits well with their job and fulfills the security requirements of ABB. We also discuss a little about cloud computing and how it is good to be included into the final solution for the BYOD security plan.fi=Opinnäytetyö kokotekstinä PDF-muodossa.|en=Thesis fulltext in PDF format.|sv=Lärdomsprov tillgängligt som fulltext i PDF-format

    Unveiling the core of IoT: comprehensive review on data security challenges and mitigation strategies

    Get PDF
    The Internet of Things (IoT) is a collection of devices such as sensors for collecting data, actuators that perform mechanical actions on the sensor's collected data, and gateways used as an interface for effective communication with the external world. The IoT has been successfully applied to various fields, from small households to large industries. The IoT environment consists of heterogeneous networks and billions of devices increasing daily, making the system more complex and this need for privacy and security of IoT devices become a major concern. The critical components of IoT are device identification, a large number of sensors, hardware operating systems, and IoT semantics and services. The layers of a core IoT application are presented in this paper with the protocols used in each layer. The security challenges at various IoT layers are unveiled in this review paper along with the existing mitigation strategies such as machine learning, deep learning, lightweight encryption techniques, and Intrusion Detection Systems (IDS) to overcome these security challenges and future scope. It has been concluded after doing an intensive review that Spoofing and Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks are two of the most common attacks in IoT applications. While spoofing tricks systems by impersonating devices, DDoS attacks flood IoT systems with traffic. IoT security is also compromised by other attacks, such as botnet attacks, man-in-middle attacks etc. which call for strong defenses including IDS framework, deep neural networks, and multifactor authentication system

    A cyber-kill-chain based taxonomy of crypto-ransomware features

    Get PDF
    In spite of being just a few years old, ransomware is quickly becoming a serious threat to our digital infrastructures, data and services. Majority of ransomware families are requesting for a ransom payment to restore a custodian access or decrypt data which were encrypted by the ransomware earlier. Although the ransomware attack strategy seems to be simple, security specialists ranked ransomware as a sophisticated attack vector with many variations and families. Wide range of features which are available in different families and versions of ransomware further complicates their detection and analysis. Though the existing body of research provides significant discussions about ransomware details and capabilities, the all research body is fragmented. Therefore, a ransomware feature taxonomy would advance cyber defenders’ understanding of associated risks of ransomware. In this paper we provide, to the best of our knowledge, the first scientific taxonomy of ransomware features, aligned with Lockheed Martin Cyber Kill Chain (CKC) model. CKC is a well-established model in industry that describes stages of cyber intrusion attempts. To ease the challenge of applying our taxonomy in real world, we also provide the corresponding ransomware defence taxonomy aligned with Courses of Action matrix (an intelligence-driven defence model). We believe that this research study is of high value for the cyber security research community, as it provides the researchers with a means of assessing the vulnerabilities and attack vectors towards the intended victims

    Can a TLS certificate be phishy?

    Get PDF
    • …
    corecore