Multi-factor & Risk-based Authentication , Security Operations , Video

ISMG Editors: How a Teen's Hack of Uber Adds to MFA Crisis

Also: SD-WAN, SASE Trends and Big Gaps in Security Culture
Clockwise, from top left: Anna Delaney, Mathew Schwartz and Michael Novinson

In the latest weekly update, ISMG editors discuss the industrywide implications of a teenager hacking into Uber's internal systems, key trends in the new Gartner SD-WAN Magic Quadrant report, and how ethics and security culture are center stage due to recent CISO revelations at Uber and Twitter.

See Also: Rapid Digitization and Risk: A Roundtable Preview

The panelists - Anna Delaney, director of productions; Mathew Schwartz, executive editor of DataBreachToday and Europe; and Michael Novinson, managing editor of business - discuss:

  • What the hack of ride-hailing service Uber by a teenager in another high-profile multifactor authentication bypass attack means for the worldwide security industry, which heavily relies on MFA;
  • How the conversation around single-vendor SASE versus multivendor SASE is evolving and whether Gartner's projection of 50% adoption of a single-vendor approach to applications, gateways and zero trust will come true;
  • The recent security incidents and revelations at Uber and Twitter centering on former CISOs and the nagging questions they raise about ethics, security culture and the future of cybersecurity leadership.

The ISMG Editors' Panel runs weekly. Don't miss our previous installments, including the Sept. 9 edition with cryptocurrency expert Ari Redbord and the Sept. 16 edition discussing the increasing use of intermittent or partial encryption by ransomware gangs.


About the Author

Anna Delaney

Anna Delaney

Director, ISMG Productions

An experienced broadcast journalist, Delaney conducts interviews with senior cybersecurity leaders around the world. Previously, she was editor-in-chief of the website for The European Information Security Summit, or TEISS. Earlier, she worked at Levant TV and Resonance FM and served as a researcher at the BBC and ITV in their documentary and factual TV departments.




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