UK teens to study cyber warfare through GCHQ-backed programme
The GCHQ-backed Cyber Security Challenge UK is planning to teach UK students aged 12 to 18 cyber defence skills through the importation of the US-created Cyber Patriot programme.
The GCHQ-backed Cyber Security Challenge UK is planning to teach UK students aged 12 to 18 cyber defence skills through the importation of the US-created Cyber Patriot programme.
A senior technical support officer at the University of Huddersfield has flown high in the prestigious 2013 DC3 Digital Forensics Challenge, a global cyber security competition designed by experts at the US Department of Defense Cyber Crime Centre (DC3).
Antony Savvas | 14 Dec | Read more
Without universally availability, plan could miss smaller businesses hackers could use as an entry point to critical infrastructure companies
Antone Gonsalves | 17 May | Read more
A 26 year-old British software developer has been ranked as the best civilian in the 2012 DC3 Digital Forensics Challenge, an unusually demanding round of the Cyber Security Challenge hosted by the US Department of Defense Cyber Crime Centre (DC3).
John E Dunn | 04 Jan | Read more
The biggest business challenge today, in the minds of many information security officers, is the stealthy online infiltration by attackers to steal valuable proprietary information. The reality, they say, is that these so-called "advanced persistent threats" are so rampant and unrelenting they are forcing IT to rethink network security.
Ellen Messmer | 03 Aug | Read more
Stealthy, sometime long-term cyber-espionage attacks to steal sensitive proprietary information -- what some now call "advanced persistent threats" (APT) -- have become a top worry for businesses.
Ellen Messmer | 08 Aug | Read more