CrashOverride update. Influence ops harder to disrupt than infrastructure. Samba exploited for cryptocurrency mining. NSO Group for sale. Botnets and fake news. Airliner laptop bans.

Published: June 13, 2017, 6:29 p.m.

In today's podcast, we hear that CrashOverride looks like a power grid threat, and industry and government are taking it seriously. Cyber operations against ISIS are proving better at collection than disruption. Criminals are exploiting vulnerable Samba instances to spread cryptocurrency mining software. NSO Group has put itself up for sale, valued at more than a billion dollars. Well-informed observers of a civil libertarian bent think botnets don't have First Amendment rights. \xa0Johannes Ulrich from from SANS and the ISC Stormcast Podcast on IPV6 security.\xa0Kirsten Bay from Cyber adAPT on Wannacry and the importance of a detection-led approach.\xa0And if you wondered about that airport laptop ban, here's the rest of the story.\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices