Tag Archive for: box’

Box adds ransomware content security; Box Sign goes GA


Box Inc. has announced new integrations with Microsoft Office, Slack and Zoom in an effort to increase collaboration among users.

The Slack integration, planned for later this year, will enable Slack users to upload files to Box within the Slack interface as well as maintain Box content security protocols and user-set compliance rules. A Box app for Zoom, launched last month in the Zoom App Marketplace, cuts down on clicks for presenting Box files in Zoom meetings. It also enables users to browse, preview and share Box files directly from Zoom, whether the meeting is active or not.

For Box users whose organizations meet and collaborate with Teams and use Microsoft Office apps such as Excel, Word and PowerPoint, the latest integrations enable multi-person collaboration in Word online and desktop apps in Box files. For companies that use both Teams and Box — which Box claims is in the hundreds of thousands — the Box-Teams integration enables Box to be the default storage destination for content.

For users of the Box Shield content security add-on, Box released more content security features that include ransomware detection that quarantines files before they can shut down a Box user’s network. The Box Shield approach to content security is “ingenious,” said Deep Analysis founder Alan Pelz-Sharpe, because while a Box customer may have millions of documents spread among petabytes in its Box instance, Box Shield focuses on only the ones that are active at any given moment. Box’s security features and security certifications such FedRAMP High keep them ahead of many competitors, he said.

“Truthfully, that’s been their big differentiator,” Pelz-Sharpe said. “[Companies] that are in product selection mode who ask me about file-sharing systems, it’s just become rote to say, ‘Well, if you’re really, really concerned about compliance and security, you definitely should be looking at Box.'”

Box for Microsoft integration
Among the features unveiled at BoxWorks Digital 2021 is an integration with Microsoft Word that enables multi-party live editing of files in Box.

Box adds mobile document scanner

Vendors are turning smartphones into document scanners that perform optical character recognition. Adobe released…

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Cybersecurity training startup Hack The Box raises $10.6M Series A led by Paladin Capital – TechCrunch


Cybersecurity training startup Hack The Box, which emerged originally from Greece, has raised a Series A investment round of $10.6 million, led by Paladin Capital Group and joined by Osage University Partners, Brighteye Ventures and existing investors Marathon Venture Capital. It will use the funding to expand. Most recently it launched Hack The Box Academy.

Started in 2017, Hack The Box specializes in using “ethical hacking” to train cybersecurity techniques. Users are given challenges to “attack” virtual vulnerable labs in a simulated, gamified and test environment. This approach has garnered more than 500,000 platform members, from beginners to experts, and brought in around 800 organizations (such as governments, Fortune 500 companies, and academic institutions) to improve their cyber-adversarial knowledge.

Haris Pylarinos, Hack The Box co-founder and CEO said: “Everything we do is geared around creating a safer internet by empowering corporate teams and individuals to create unbreakable systems.”

Gibb Witham, senior vice president, Paladin Capital Group, commented: “We’re excited to be backing Hack The Box at this inflection point in their growth as organizations recognize the increasing importance of an adversarial security practice to combat constantly evolving cyber attacks.”

Hack The Box competes with Offensive Security, Immersive Labs, INE and eLearnSecurity (acquired by INE).

Hack The Box is using a SaaS business model. In the B2C market it provides monthly and annual subscriptions that provide unrestricted access to the training content and in the B2B market, it provides bi-annual and annual licenses which provide access to dedicated adversarial training environments with value-added admin capabilities.

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Old ‘pole box’ net beats 911 on fire call

Who would have thought those fire alarm “pole boxes” even worked anymore?

They don’t in most places, but a couple of teenagers in Canton, Mass., either knew or figured it was worth a try there when they spotted a building fire Saturday night.

From the Canton Police Department’s Facebook page:

Matt (Casamento) and W.T. (Khoury) were out and about and noticed the rear of a building on Washington Street was on fire. The fire was in a spot that probably would not have been noticed for some time if it wasn’t for the boys. They ran around to the front of the building — Matt called 911 and W.T. did something that most adults wouldn’t think to do – he ran and pulled the nearest “pole box.” Pole boxes are fairly rare these days except in urban and populated areas and they are quite antiquated. We still have them in Canton.

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Network World Paul McNamara