In this podcast from the Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute (SEI), Gregory J. Touhill, director of the SEI CERT Division, talks with principal researcher Suzanne Miller about the 2020 attack on Solar Winds software and how to prevent a recurrence of another major attack on key systems that are in widespread use. Solar Winds is the name of a company that provided software to the U.S. federal government. In late 2020, news surfaced about a cyberattack that had already been underway for several months and that had reportedly compromised 250 government agencies, including the Treasury Department, the State Department, and nuclear research labs. In addition to compromising data, the attack resulted in financial losses of more than $90 million and was probably one of the most dangerous modern attacks on software and software-based businesses and government agencies in the recent past. The SolarWinds incident demonstrated the challenges of securing systems when they are the product of complex supply chains.
In this podcast, Touhill discusses topics including the need for systems to be secure by design and secure by default, the importance of transparency in the reporting of vulnerabilities and anomalous system behavior, the CERT Acquisition Security Framework, the need to secure data across a wide range of disparate devices and systems, and tactics and strategies for individuals and organizations to safeguard their data and the systems they rely on daily.
Improving Cybersecurity Through Cyber Intelligence
A Requirement Specification Language for AADL
Becoming a CISO: Formal and Informal Requirements
Predicting Quality Assurance with Software Metrics and Security Methods
Network Flow and Beyond
A Community College Curriculum for Secure Software Development
Security and the Internet of Things
The SEI Fellow Series: Nancy Mead
An Open Source Tool for Fault Tree Analysis
Global Value Chain – An Expanded View of the ICT Supply Chain
Intelligence Preparation for Operational Resilience
Evolving Air Force Intelligence with Agile Techniques
Threat Modeling and the Internet of Things
Open Systems Architectures: When & Where to Be Closed
Effective Reduction of Avoidable Complexity in Embedded Systems
Toward Efficient and Effective Software Sustainment
Quality Attribute Refinement and Allocation
Is Java More Secure Than C?
Identifying the Architectural Roots of Vulnerabilities
Build Security In Maturity Model (BSIMM) – Practices from Seventy Eight Organizations
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