Thank you to everyone who attended and spoke as ATT&CKcon went virtual in 2020. Broken into a series of four 1.5 hour virtual sessions, ATT&CKcon Power Hour talks have been viewed over 12,000 times. ATT&CKcon Power Hour brought us talks on areas of ATT&CK we haven't heard about before such as Cloud and Mobile as well as insights on how organizations are adapting to features such as sub-techniques. Please continue to watch and share these talks!
AttackIQ 2020 Predictions
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In this talk from the MITRE ATT&CKcon Power Hour session on October 9, 2020, Brian discusses how refactoring for sub-techniques offered us the opportunity to apply all the lessons learned in more than two years of operationalizing ATT&CK. He also explores how Red Canary has remodeled its ATT&CK mapping to allow for added flexibility and human input and shows what happens when the Red Canary applied their new sub-technique mappings to the 2020 Threat Detection Report.
In the months leading up to the 2020 elections, governments were focused on the spread of disinformation to influence election outcomes, but other urgent national security demands emerged in the wake of massive cyberattacks on critical infrastructure. These immediate cyberthreats will continue to dominate government focus throughout 2022, researchers predicted.
As part of our year in review, which looked at critical events during the last year and how they might influence 2021, SC Media collected predictions across a range of categories from cybersecurity experts. Here, the cyber community reads the tea leaves on the threat landscape. Click here for our tech predictions, and be sure to check back during the next couple of weeks to see what 2021 will bring in strategic priorities and privacy policy.
Shelter-in-place orders and travel restrictions imposed in early 2020 forced Canadian organizations to quickly revamp their IT operations to provide remote access to employees, partners and customers. The move allowed them to stay in business, while also introducing new security threats.
While all organizations remain at risk in part due to the work from home, I believe healthcare will be the most targeted industry in the next year. In 2021, ransomware will target healthcare even more so than in 2020. As R&D organizations scramble to find a vaccine for the COVID-19 pandemic, ransomware threat actors will similarly be scrambling to make a profit even more so than before. Threat actors will be targeting medical research laboratories, big pharma, biotechnology companies and any third party companies that healthcare works with, as these organizations will likely be storing the patient data being analyzed in order to create a vaccine. Biotechnology, pharma and medical organizations will have to step up their cybersecurity posture in order to keep up with the wave of new attacks. It will no longer be an option, especially given the pressure for coming up with a vaccine that is tested and safe.
Now's the time to lean into the cloud more than ever, precisely because of the uncertainty. We saw it during the pandemic in early 2020, and we're seeing it again now, which is, the benefits of the cloud only magnify in times of uncertainty.
IT services and consulting firms have begun to position themselves to seize the market opportunity. As part of its post-merger strategy, Prime Technology Group, a technology services provider based in Wayne, Pa., and Synerzip, an Agile software product development firm based in Dallas, this week rebranded as Excellarate. The two companies merged in 2020.
"Our customers are getting to such a size and our contracts are getting to such a size that offshore capabilities do matter," Tony Safoian said. SADA rebranded in 2020, with the company conducting more enterprise business and approaching $1 billion in total contract value bookings.
As Commander, 346 Recruiting Squadron for the United States Space Force, Lieutenant Colonel Aaron Celaya is responsible for all Air Force recruiting covering 99,000 sqm in Northern and Central California, directing and operating the recruiting activities of seven enlisted accession flights. As an AI and Human-Machine Teaming Researcher, Celaya also supports both the Air Force and Space Force as an AI Liaison and Military Deputy Chief Scientist. His research deals with human decision-making when paired with AI, autonomous systems, and other types of artificial systems. Lt. Col. Celaya entered the Air Force in 2005 as a graduate of the Air Force ROTC program at Brigham Young university, before entering the Space Force in 2020.
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