Tag Archive for: Japan

Ransomware gangs target Japan as a feeding ground


The Tsurugi Municipal Handa Hospital is a modestly sized, dreary pile in a somnolent corner of Shikoku island. It looks on to a river, backs on to a hill and serves an ageing local population last clocked at 8,048.

The perfect place, therefore, for the world’s most ruthless cyber-gangs to expand their assault on everyday life, shift the globalised ransomware war front deep into Asia and confront a whole new victim-scape with one of the more excruciating debates of modern business.

At this point the Handa hospital is just about back to normal, barring apologies and incident reports. But for two months at the end of last year, it was paralysed — unable to accept new patients and perform other basic functions after a ransomware attack targeting the extortionists’ sweet spot of medical records.

The assault on a stretched rural Japanese hospital during a pandemic would, under any circumstances, offer a chilling reminder of how unrepentant ransomware gangs are in pursuit of a payday. As a decade of rapidly rising attacks has shown (reported incidents more than doubled in the UK between 2020 and 2021), no company or institution is off limits, no weakness unexploitable, no threatened collateral harm too pitiless.

The medical, educational, infrastructure, legal and financial industries are favourite targets precisely because the stakes are so high and the threats so agonising. They are also getting more sophisticated. The average time spent inside a company’s network before a ransom demand is made is rising. The additional time, say former GCHQ officials in bleak briefings on the issue, is spent honing the most acutely painful threat.

The scale of financial carnage, too, continues to surge. In its 2021 report, IBM Security calculated that, globally, the average cost of a ransomware breach had hit a record $4.62mn — a figure that did not even include the ransom payment, which some experts reckon are handed over in at least a third of cases.

But the Handa incident, say cyber-ransom negotiators at Nihon Cyber Defence (NCD) — an agency that advises the Japanese government and whose team includes the founding head of the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre — underscores an…

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Malware Analysis Market Size And Forecast to 2028 |FireEye (US), Trend Micro (Japan), Cisco Systems Inc. (US), Sophos Group (US), Symantec Corporation (US) – Indian Defence News


Market Size And Forecast

The “Malware Analysis Market” research examines market estimates and predictions in nice detail. It additionally aids within the execution of those findings by demonstrating tangible benefits to business stakeholders and business leaders. each company should anticipate however their product are going to be utilized in the longer term. Given this level of uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 state of affairs, this analysis is essential for higher understanding previous disruptions and increasing readiness for successive steps in decision-making. the foremost recent study makes an attempt to alter the advanced marketplace for company executives by providing strategic insights and exhibiting resiliency in sudden conditions. The insights will assist all potential readers in distinguishing necessary business bottlenecks.

The primary objective of the report is to educate business owners and assist them in making an astute investment in the market. The study highlights regional and sub-regional insights with corresponding factual and statistical analysis. The report includes first-hand, the latest data, which is obtained from the company website, annual reports, industry-recommended journals, and paid resources. The Malware Analysis report will facilitate business owners to comprehend the current trend of the market and make profitable decisions.

Market Leaders Profiled:

  • FireEye (US)
  • Trend Micro (Japan)
  • Cisco Systems Inc. (US)
  • Sophos Group (US)
  • Symantec Corporation (US)
  • Palo Alto Networks
  • Inc. (US)
  • Check Point Software Technologies (US)
  • Kaspersky Lab (Russia)
  • Qualys (US)
  • McAfee (US)
  • Fortinet (US)
  • Intezer (Israel)
  • VMRay (Germany)
  • Proofpoint (US)
  • AT&T Inc. (US)
  • VIPRE (J2Global) (US)
  • Crowdstrike (US)
  • Cylance (Blackberry) (US)
  • Lastline (US)
  • Juniper Networks (US)
  • Fidelis Security (US)
  • Joe Security (Switzerland)
  • Forcepoint (US)
  • Malwarebytes (US)

Report Analysis & Segments:

The  Malware Analysis is segmented as per the type of product, application, and geography. All of the segments of the Malware Analysis are carefully analyzed based on their market share, CAGR, value and volume growth, and other important factors. We have also provided Porter’s Five Forces…

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The Linux Foundation Announces Keynote Speakers for Open Source Summit Japan + Automotive Linux Summit 2021


SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 11, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit organization enabling mass innovation through open source, today announced the keynote speakers for Open Source Summit Japan + Automotive Linux Summit 2021, taking place virtually December 14-15. One registration pass includes access to both events. The keynote speakers can be viewed here and the full schedule can be viewed here.

Open Source Summit Japan provides a forum for developers, architects and other technologists – as well as open source community and industry leaders – to learn how to gain a competitive advantage by using innovative, open solutions and to collaborate for the advancement of the world’s largest shared technologies. Automotive Linux Summit connects the developer community driving the innovation in this area together with the vendors and users providing and using the code in order to drive the future of embedded devices in the automotive arena.

Keynote speakers include:

  • Josh Aas, Executive Director of the Internet Security Research Group speaking on Prossimo and Let’s Encrypt
  • Brian Behlendorf, General Manager of the Open Source Security Foundation discussing efforts to secure open source software
  • Dan Cauchy, Executive Director of Automotive Grade Linux sharing on the state of open source and automotive
  • Dr. Ibrahim Haddad, Executive Director of LF AI + Data Foundation sharing on new projects and updates
  • Dr. Audrey Lee, Senior Director, Energy Strategy at Microsoft, and LF Energy Board Member, sharing how open source can help decarbonize power systems
  • Miguel Ojeda, Software Engineer and Rust for Linux Maintainer sharing updates
  • Kate Stewart, Vice President of Dependable Embedded Systems, The Linux Foundation sharing on SPDX and SBOMs
  • Jim Zemlin, Executive Director, The Linux Foundation discussing the state of open source and sharing on the latest Linux Foundation initiatives

Registration is US$50 and one registration pass provides access to both events. The events will be held in the Japan Standard Time Zone (UTC+09:00) and will be virtual, so all you will need is a computer and an internet connection.

Members of The Linux Foundation receive a 20 percent…

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Japan is belatedly recognising the risks of cyber war


Two days before Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga announced his resignation, Japan finally set about launching his flagship, the Digital Agency.

Due to the need to create such an organization and give it political capital that may disappear by the time a new leader is elected, the world’s third-largest economy left the project embarrassingly late.

Japan will pay the price of reputation for decades of foot drag. The more successful government agencies are in the country’s digitally hesitant bureaucracy and economic modernization, the more surprising the shortcomings it uncovers and the later its efforts will appear.

However, people near the Cabinet Office say that the urgency of the birth of a digital agency masks the fear of being passed on to Kan’s successor. Japan knows that both the private and public sectors are not ready for cyberwarfare, and strongly suspects that potential enemies, especially China, are ready for cyberwarfare.

It’s interesting that Ciaran Martin, the founder and former head of the UK’s National Cyber ​​Security Center (NCSC), joins the board of directors of a small Japan-based cyber defense consultant with the highest level of Japanese ears. To the moment. government. Other advisors of the company, Japan Cyber ​​DefenseIncludes former top officers in Japan and former Chief of Staff in Taiwan.

Martin’s addition as an adviser is in line with the government’s efforts to put together a complete cyber defense strategy by December and a changing perception of the risks facing the country, according to his new colleague. NS Ransomware attack The closure of America’s largest oil pipeline in May was only the latest in a global attack on critical infrastructure, said a Japanese cyber defense executive. But it was a particularly timely illustration of what the vulnerabilities of today’s nation would look like to the people around Suga, many of whom are likely to remain in the next administration.

These real-life shocks say that those who have seen the slow progress of Japan’s public and private sectors are now essential in building a coherent cyber defense strategy.

At some level, Japan appears to have moved to a new stage of heightened…

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