ESW #282 - Jamie Moles, Dixon Styres, Tim Morris, Paul Kelly

Published: July 29, 2022, 5:13 p.m.

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In the Enterprise Security News: Blockchain security startups are still raising tons of money, but not in crypto, since it\\u2019s now worthless. Ha! just kidding. Maybe. Am I? Anvilogic, AppViewX, Sotero, Resourcely, and Push Security all raise rounds JUICY RUMORS! Is Crowdstrike buying Orca? Is Akamai getting bought out by a PE shop? HUMAN and PerimeterX join in a rare cybersecurity merger, Are Azure\\u2019s vulnerabilities out of control? Zoom brings end-to-end encryption to its cloud phone service, npm says FINE, we\\u2019ll add some security, Kaseya\\u2019s CEO is just, telling it like it is, man. The problem must be with you. A robot attacks a child, time to add EMP grenades to your EDC! All that and more!

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In order to run a successful SOC, security leaders rely on tools with different strengths to create layers of defense. This has led to a highly siloed industry with over 2,000 vendors, each with their own specific function and who very seldom work together. To gain an advantage on attackers, we need to start seeing cybersecurity as a team sport\\u2013\\u2013united for a shared mission. In this session, ExtraHop\'s Jamie Moles and CrowdStrike\'s Dixon Styres discuss why and how vendors should work together to enable better integrated security for their customers. They\'ll share their joint philosophy toward an ecosystem approach to security and will show off some of the specific capabilities of the integration between ExtraHop Reveal(x) 360 and CrowdStrike Falcon in a live demo.

This segment is sponsored by ExtraHop Networks. Visit https://securityweekly.com/extrahop to learn more about them!

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Heightened emotions, demands for updates, not knowing how bad things might be...

Incident response isn\\u2019t easy, but practice and the right tools can make it a whole lot less stressful. Some regulations like\\xa0PCI\\xa0require annual IR tests, but is that enough? Imagine playing a sport where the team meets for one half-hearted practice once a year. How would that team perform under pressure? How would they communicate?

Say this sports analogy has convinced you \\u2013 the IR team should practice more and should practice effectively. Questions still remain \\u2013 how often? Are tabletops enough, or are live exercises and simulations necessary? We\\u2019ll aim to answer these questions and more during this interview with Tim and Paul from Tanium.

This segment is sponsored by Tanium. Visit\\xa0https://securityweekly.com/tanium to learn more about them!\\xa0

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Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw282

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