Introduction In testing an organisation, a red team will be seeking to emulate a threat actor by achieving a specific goal – whether that is to gain administrative control of the network and prove they can control backups (a kin to how many ransomware operators work), through to proving access to financial systems, or even gaining […]
Unauthorised access into remote computers has been around since the 1960s but since those early days organisations and their IT systems have become complex, and that complexity is increasing at an exponential rate, making securing those systems increasingly difficult. Defence mechanisms like firewalls, antivirus software, and monitoring systems have become essential, but they aren’t enough […]
Cybersecurity Red Team engagements are exercises designed to simulate adversarial threats to organisations. They are founded on real world Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures that cybercriminals, nation states, and other threat actors employ when attacking an organisation. It is a tool for exercising detection and response capabilities and to understand how the organisation would react in […]
In our previous blog ‘WordPress Plugins: AI-dentifying Chatbot Weak Spots’ (https://prisminfosec.com/wordpress-plugins-ai-dentifying-chatbot-weak-spots/) a series of Issues were identified within AI related WordPress plugins: Today, we will be looking at further vulnerability types within these plugins that don’t provide us with the same adrenaline rush as popping a shell, but clearly show how AI plugins are being rushed […]
Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) are tasked with safeguarding an organisation’s most valuable assets: its data, intellectual property, and reputation. The role of a CISO has evolved from being an overseer of IT security to a strategic leader who must: anticipate and mitigate complex cyber threats, act as the board’s expert in cybersecurity matters which […]
An inadvertent data leak from a GitHub push update identified an RCE in the Linux Common Unix Printing System (CUPS) service, as an unauthenticated Remote Code Execution vulnerability with a CVE score of 9.9. The vulnerabilities: CUPS and cups-browsed (a service responsible for discovering new printers and automatically adding them to the system) ship with […]
Every organisation is different in terms of how it uses data, how its processes work, and how their staff conduct themselves. As a result no single security tool, deployment, implementation, or capability can protect them. Layered defences, also known as “defence in depth,” is the approach of implementing multiple layers of security controls to protect […]
In today’s rapidly evolving digital landscape, organizations face an ever-growing array of cyber threats. To stay ahead, many are turning to red team testing – a proactive approach where skilled cybersecurity professionals simulate real-world attacks to uncover misconfigurations, vulnerabilities, and inconsistent security behaviours. However, as with any initiative, red team testing carries its own set […]
Penetration Testing and Red Teaming are both valuable, important, and focussed in their own ways. Too often Penetration Tests are used to assess a system and it is a rinse and repeat of the previous year’s test results, and the organisation states that they have documented and accepted the risks often due to budgetary reasons […]
In this blog post, we will explore how red teaming helps identify and then translate intricate technical risks into comprehensible business language, ensuring that stakeholders understand the implications and can take appropriate actions to safeguard their organisations. Understanding Red Teaming Red teaming is a structured process where cybersecurity professionals simulate real world threats to help […]