April 20, 202000:15:05

Podcast: BlackBerry RATs report reveals that China has the keys to the United States and Rest of the World internet backdoor!

It is clear, China has been actively working on and providing applications and code that have been included into popular Data Center and enterprise Red Hat, CentOS, and Ubuntu Linux versions for the past decade or more. Eric Cornelius, Chief Product Architect at BlackBerry explains to Don Witt of The Channel Daily News, a TR publication, how the survey was conducted and how the data pointed them to their conclusions. Eric Cornelius At this point, one has to assume that no area of the internet is safe and that China is watching, aware and stealing data/secrets and corporate assets. Linux, once thought to be secure, now reveals that, “groups examined in this report are using Linux servers as a “network beachhead” for other operations – that is, as a highly available attack vector that is always-on and poorly defended.”  Listen in and find out – What this means for enterprises as their employees work from home How enterprises can better protect and secure their data and networks from foreign espionage Organizations today face a chaotic environment as cybersecurity threats become more sophisticated, and pervasive, while the numbers of connected enterprise endpoints and the amount of data shared at the edge grows exponentially. To bring order to this chaos, a comprehensive security approach to endpoint security is essential to protect against and remediate cyber threats, while providing visibility across all endpoints. Unified Endpoint Security needs to protect people, devices, networks and apps by offering improved cross-platform visibility and cyber threat prevention and remediation, while simplifying administration. For more information, go to: mediarelations@BlackBerry.com or https://www.BlackBerry.com/us/en

No transcript available.