R'lyeh Consulting, LLP-RSAC 2016 Reading List

Started by Netwörkheäd, July 27, 2016, 06:01:15 AM

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Netwörkheäd

RSAC 2016 Reading List

Hello one and all, and I hope you’re in a security frame of mind. Here’s a list of things to read up on, as recommended by presenters at RSA Conference 2016: Getk9.org: free proxy server for home use from Blue Coat. I’m using it now. Although I needed to open up YouTube for personal use, […]

Hello one and all, and I hope you’re in a security frame of mind. Here’s a list of things to read up on, as recommended by presenters at RSA Conference 2016:


Getk9.org: free proxy server for home use from Blue Coat. I’m using it now. Although I needed to open up YouTube for personal use, I like knowing that it’s leveraging that vendor’s ability to block malicious content. Proxies aren’t just for kids anymore. Every layer of personal security helps.


The Security Awareness Company: Lots of free stuff here, including humorous parody videos. Worth a visit or three, and there may be something useful for your enterprise here.


Google Hacking for Penetration Testers: A very juicy PDF with information on how to Google things up like you never dreamed possible. If you like it, consider buying the book.


How to Fool a GPS: suggested in the session that dealt with hacking the XBEE traffic in a commercial drone.


Janell Burley Hofmann’s Contract: This is for the kids and their parents. Parents would do well to sign a slightly modified version of the contract.


SFS.Gov: Instead of having ROTC pay for college, how about getting the NSF to pay, with the students working in the US Government cyber-security services after graduation? An excellent way to start a career in security.


CERT Guide to Insider Threats: PDF of contents, index, and sample chapter. If you want a complete picture of security, you need to look at the threat within, and the authors of this book really know their stuff.


ICS CERT Summary of Ukraine Power Grid Hack: Nice summary, should get you thinking, hopefully researching on this matter further. The means by which the hack was accomplished was not all that difficult to mitigate.


ASD Top 4 Mitigation Strategies: Your firm would do well to adopt these as standards.


I hope this helps you all to have some very paranoid fun.


Source: RSAC 2016 Reading List

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