Book Image

Cybersecurity Threats, Malware Trends, and Strategies

By : Tim Rains
Book Image

Cybersecurity Threats, Malware Trends, and Strategies

By: Tim Rains

Overview of this book

After scrutinizing numerous cybersecurity strategies, Microsoft’s former Global Chief Security Advisor in this book helps you understand the efficacy of popular cybersecurity strategies and more. Cybersecurity Threats, Malware Trends, and Strategies offers an unprecedented long-term view of the global threat landscape by examining the twenty-year trend in vulnerability disclosures and exploitation, nearly a decade of regional differences in malware infections, the socio-economic factors that underpin them, and how global malware has evolved. This will give you further perspectives into malware protection for your organization. It also examines internet-based threats that CISOs should be aware of. The book will provide you with an evaluation of the various cybersecurity strategies that have ultimately failed over the past twenty years, along with one or two that have actually worked. It will help executives and security and compliance professionals understand how cloud computing is a game changer for them. By the end of this book, you will know how to measure the effectiveness of your organization’s cybersecurity strategy and the efficacy of the vendors you employ to help you protect your organization and yourself.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
9
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10
Index

About malware

Before we dive into the threat data, I need to provide you with some definitions for terms I'll use throughout the rest of this chapter.

Malicious software, also known as malware, is software whose author's intent is malicious. The developers of malware are trying to impede the confidentiality, integrity, and/or accessibility of data and/or the systems that process, transmit, and store it.

As I discussed in Chapter 1, Ingredients for a Successful Cybersecurity Strategy, malware authors can be motivated by many different things, including hubris, notoriety, military espionage, economic espionage, and hacktivism.

Most malware families today are blended threats. What I mean by this is that many years ago, threats were discrete—they were either a worm or a backdoor, but not both. Today, most malware has characteristics of multiple categories of malware. Analysts in anti-malware labs that reverse-engineer malware samples typically classify malware...