Attacks related to Domain Name System infrastructure – such as DNS hijacking, DNS tunneling and DNS amplification attacks – are on the rise, and many IT organizations are questioning the security of ...
Because of its universality, DNS has become a natural enforcement layer for network policies, whether for security, ...
Cybercriminals today are targeting one of the internet’s least-protected utilities: the domain name system (DNS). Functioning as the internet’s phone book, DNS translates domains, like example.com, ...
As a core backbone of the infrastructure, Domain Name Service (DNS) acts as the phone book of the Internet. It helps route users hunting for a specific domain name and connects them to the resources ...
Cybercrime continues to grow rapidly; indeed, it is a highly lucrative global industry. Without accurately accounting for profits from cybercrime (1, 2), we are left looking at the staggering ...
MAHWAH, N.J., April 17, 2024— Radware, a leading provider of cyber security and application delivery solutions, today introduced a new AI-powered, rule-free edition of its DNS DDoS Protection solution ...
It’s an understatement to say that artificial intelligence has been on top of every information technology and business leader’s priority list since the release of ChatGPT. The easy-to-use generative ...
Managing a handful of domain names is usually straightforward. Managing hundreds is a different discipline entirely. Large ...
A Russian computer researcher and part-time hacker’s recent discovery of vulnerabilities in the latest Domain Name System (DNS) “patch” has brought renewed urgency to the debate over Internet security ...
In this exclusive interview with Streaming Media Europe editor Steve Nathans-Kelly, G&L Systemhaus CEO Alexander Leschinsky, explores the evolving landscape of streaming and content security, ...
The Domain Name System (DNS) has been around for nearly 40 years, yet surprisingly few organizations understand what a critical security tool it can be. DNS can play many vital security roles on a ...
As I’m fond of saying, back in the early days of BIND name servers—when I got my start in DNS—they had a whopping two security features: They didn’t accept responses from IP addresses they hadn’t ...