Billede af showet Follow the White Rabbit - IT Security Podcast - English Edition

Follow the White Rabbit - IT Security Podcast - English Edition

Podcast af Link11

engelsk

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Læs mere Follow the White Rabbit - IT Security Podcast - English Edition

"Wake up, Neo. The Matrix has you." Welcome to the rabbit hole of cybersecurity. Instead of a red pill, we offer something much more valuable: clarity in a world of digital chaos. With cyberattacks surging globally and costing businesses billions while threatening critical infrastructure, staying ahead of the curve isn't just for IT pros - it’s a necessity for everyone. Follow the White Rabbit for your backstage pass to the frontlines of IT security. Hosted by Kofi Osae-Attah, the information security officer at Link11, we explore the strategies of modern attackers and the cutting-edge defenses that protect our digital future. Why subscribe? Global Insights: From our headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, we discuss cyber resilience that transcends borders. Cutting-Edge Tech: Discover how AI and machine learning are revolutionizing DDoS attacks and automated defense mechanisms. Regulatory Roadmap: We demystify NIS2, the Cyber Resilience Act, and the EU AI Act to reveal what matters most for your business. Expert Access: Join us for candid conversations with industry leaders and Link11’s top security architects. Whether you're a CISO, tech enthusiast, or business owner navigating the cloud, we provide the insights you need to protect yourself against data breaches, identity theft, and infrastructure disruptions. Follow the White Rabbit. Your journey into the heart of cybersecurity starts now. Keep calm and get protected.

Alle episoder

7 episoder

episode #07: Your Next Hire Might Be a North Korean Spy cover

#07: Your Next Hire Might Be a North Korean Spy

North Korea is infiltrating Fortune 500 companies with fake employees. They create authentic LinkedIn profiles, excel in remote interviews, collect salaries, and secretly steal intellectual property, cryptocurrency, and system access. This isn't a future threat. It's happening right now across more than 40 countries. In this episode of Follow the White Rabbit, Link11 ISO Kofi Osae-Attah sits down with Kritika Roy, a senior threat intelligence researcher at DCSO in Berlin. Together, they map the threat landscape that most security teams only partially see. Kritika's work sits at the intersection of geopolitics and cybersecurity — and that intersection is where the full picture emerges. China is running long-term intelligence operations aligned with its five-year economic plan. Russia is focused on disruption and sabotage, especially since invading Ukraine. Iran is tracking dissidents and targeting organizations with Israeli ties. And North Korea? It's doing it all — stealing money to fund weapons programs, embedding operatives inside companies, and learning by doing. The line between nation-state espionage and cybercrime has blurred to the point of being nearly indistinguishable. Threat actors are buying ransomware on the dark web as if it were Amazon. Attribution is becoming more difficult. Defenders are falling behind. The most important insight from this conversation isn't technical; it's contextual. Geopolitics determines who targets you, when, and why. A NATO summit, a trade dispute, or an election can trigger a wave of tailored phishing campaigns and targeted intrusions. Kritika's advice to security teams isn't to become intelligence agencies. Rather, it's to read the news, understand the motivations behind attacks, and stop treating every threat with the same level of urgency. Prioritize based on context. If you're hiring remotely, ask your candidates what the local food is like. You'll be surprised at how much that one question can reveal. TAKEAWAYS: 1. North Korean IT workers are already inside companies. They are hired through legitimate job platforms, work as regular employees, and use their access to steal money, intellectual property, and system knowledge. The fix? At a minimum, conduct one in-person interview. 2. Geopolitics is a threat intelligence tool. Phishing lures are timed to coincide with summits, elections, and conflicts. Knowing what's happening in the world allows you to anticipate what's coming at your organization. 3. The four main threat actors have different goals. China wants intelligence. Russia wants to cause disruption. North Korea wants money and knowledge. Iran targets dissidents and organizations related to Israel. Knowing who you're up against changes everything about how you defend yourself. 4. The line between cybercrime and nation-state activity is disappearing. Nation-state actors are purchasing off-the-shelf malware on the dark web. Attribution is becoming more difficult. Security teams need to adapt their thinking. 5. Fundamentals still win. Patch management, identity security, endpoint visibility, and regular red team exercises are not boring basics; they're essential. They're the difference between being resilient and being exposed. Subscribe to Follow the White Rabbit. If this conversation changed the way you think about hiring, threat intelligence, or geopolitics, tell someone. Subscribe on your preferred platform, leave a review, and share this episode with your security and HR teams. Both need to hear it. LINKS: Take a look at Kritika Roy's Linkedin profile [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kritika-roy-dcso/] or the DCSO Website [https://www.dcso.de] MITRE ATT&CK – North Korea Threat Groups [https://attack.mitre.org/groups/] FBI Advisory: North Korean IT Worker Threat (2024) [https://www.ic3.gov] Mandiant / Google: APT Overview by Nation State [https://cloud.google.com/security/resources/insights/apt-groups]

21. maj 2026 - 26 min
episode #06: From Digital to Systemic Resilience - The Quantum Shift in Cybersecurity cover

#06: From Digital to Systemic Resilience - The Quantum Shift in Cybersecurity

In this episode of Follow the Rabbit, host Kofi Osae-Attah sits down with Luigi Rebuffi, founder of the European Cybersecurity Organization (ECSO) and the Women4Cyber Foundation, for a deep dive. Drawing on his 40-year background in nuclear engineering, Luigi challenges the industry to move beyond digital resilience, which he views as a static buzzword, toward a more holistic, systemic approach to resilience. He argues that most organizations are fighting the "old war," treating cybersecurity as a linear compliance checklist. In contrast, systemic resilience is inspired by complex systems theory. It focuses on nonlinear interdependencies (the "mesh"), where a failure in a minor component can lead to a crisis, but where optimized investment in these interactions can also create "double value," improving safety and operational efficiency. The conversation also covers the "positive cascade" of the human factor, why government resilience must shift from "fortress" mentalities to flexible meshes, and how a Bayesian approach to risk management can help leaders navigate a non-binary world. Takeaways 1. Resilience Beyond the Digital: Digital resilience is only one sub-element of a larger system. Systemic resilience considers the interaction of all parts - mechanical, environmental, and human - to prevent total collapse. 2. The "Ferrari" Analogy: You can have the perfect cybersecurity "engine" (tools), but if your "tires" (human training or third-party dependencies) are flat, the system won't be resilient. We must assess the interaction between parts, not just isolated components. 3. The Human Factor as a Resource: Although the human factor is often blamed as a vulnerability, it is fundamental to resilience. Luigi argues that organizational systems should be designed so that human error doesn't lead to catastrophic failure. 4. From Linear to Systemic Risk: Traditional risk management is Newtonian, or cause-and-effect. Modern resilience requires a Bayesian approach that maps the probability of "hidden crises" within a complex mesh of factors. 5. Sovereignty as a Dynamic Mesh: Government resilience shouldn't rely on building a static "fortress." True sovereignty comes from controlling the "mesh" - the links and interactions between existing partners - to maintain control. Why Listen? Are you tired of the same old "compliance-first" discussions? This episode offers a radical, engineer-led perspective on the future of European strategy. Luigi Rebuffi offers a blueprint for how organizations and governments can stop constructing static fortresses and begin to understand the dynamic interdependencies of the modern world. Love the show? Make sure to like, follow, and subscribe to the Follow the Rabbit podcast! LINKS: You'll find Luigi on Linkedin [https://www.linkedin.com/in/luigi-rebuffi-90a439b0/]. Here [https://ecs-org.eu/]you find more information about the ECSO.

7. maj 2026 - 26 min
episode #05: The Human Element - Building Resilience Through Preparedness cover

#05: The Human Element - Building Resilience Through Preparedness

In this episode of Follow the Rabbit, host Kofi Osae-Attah is joined by Erlend Andreas Gjære, co-founder and CEO of Secure Practice. Together, they debunk the common misconception that "people are the weakest link." Erlend argues that, with the right focus, the human element can be an organization’s greatest asset. He believes this shift requires a change in focus from basic security awareness to true preparedness. The conversation moves beyond traditional "checkbox" compliance to explore how storytelling and interactive exercises can foster genuine employee engagement. Erlend shares the fascinating story of a company summer party that was transformed by a high-stakes simulation. This example proves that a resilient security culture is built through shared experiences rather than dry e-learning modules. Finally, they discuss the psychology of phishing and explain why the best technology investment can't replace human intuition. Understanding how our brains process urgency and fear enables leaders to build a culture of reporting and recovery that transforms potential disasters into minor footnotes. TAKEAWAYS 1. People are the last line of defense. Calling employees the "weakest link" is a big mistake. When a user clicks a link, it is often the final step in a system-wide failure rather than an isolated human error. 2. Preparedness > Awareness: Knowing a policy and acting on it are not the same. Preparedness involves co-creating organizational resilience by practicing how the company would function during an incident. 3. The Psychology of the Click: Phishing exploits instinctive "System 1" thinking. Training should focus on helping employees "slow down" and engage in "System 2" thinking, or logical reasoning, when they feel an emotional trigger, such as urgency. 4. Culture is a Conversation: A strong security culture isn't just a poster on a wall. It’s measured by how frequently and comfortably security is discussed at all levels of the business. 5. The Business Case for People: It is often easier to buy a tool than to change a habit. However, the real business case for security lies in investing in people who understand the business processes they are protecting. Why Listen? If you want to transition your team from fear-based compliance to confidence-based preparedness, this conversation is essential. Erlend Andreas Gjære offers a refreshing, human-centric approach to modern cybersecurity leadership. Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe to the Follow the Rabbit podcast! Join us as we explore the people and technology that protect the future of the internet. LINKS: You'll find Erlend on Linkedin [https://www.linkedin.com/in/erlendgjaere/]. Find more about Secure Practice here [https://securepractice.co/]. Erlend also founded She speakes Cyber [https://shespeakscyber.org/].

23. apr. 2026 - 22 min
episode #04: Pre-Crime: The Shift from Reactive to Predictive Cybersecurity cover

#04: Pre-Crime: The Shift from Reactive to Predictive Cybersecurity

In this episode of Follow the Rabbit, host Kofi Osae-Attah sits down with Luigi Lenguito, the CEO and co-founder of BforeAI, for an in-depth discussion about the revolutionary field of predictive security. Luigi explains his "Pre-Crime" philosophy, which shifts the cybersecurity posture from "assume breach" and reactive threat detection to a model of preemptive measures that identifies malicious infrastructure - the criminal "DevOps" - before a single victim is affected. Drawing an analogy to weather forecasting, Lenguito illustrates how data and supercomputing have transformed our ability to predict hurricanes. He argues that cybersecurity is currently in an "emergency room" phase - stressful and reactive - and that predictive intelligence is the key to moving "left of boom." By isolating and shutting down infrastructure before phishing pages or campaigns go live, organizations can stop being victims and become active participants in their own defense. The conversation also addresses the role of automation in scaling these defenses. Given the predicted 5,000% increase in threats over the last year, Luigi makes a bold case for aggressive preemptive measures, even at the cost of minor false positives. He explains why the future is human-augmented, not human-operated, and how this shift enables CISOs to safeguard the ultimate business case for security: Brand trust. TAKEAWAYS 1. Move "left of boom": Traditional threat detection (EDR/MDR) often means you are already a victim. Predictive security, on the other hand, identifies the "pre-attack" phase, which includes the registration of malicious domains and exfiltration servers. 2. The Weather Forecast Analogy: Just as we use satellites and models to preempt natural disasters, we must use automation to gain the foresight necessary to disrupt cybercrime before it starts. 3. Managing False Positives: Luigi argues for a shift in KPIs. Accepting a 0.05% rate of false positives is a strategic trade-off to avoid months-long, systemic outages that cost millions. 4. Democratized Cybercrime: The barrier to entry for attackers has collapsed due to generative AI (GenAI). There has been a shift from low-volume, high-skill APTs to high-volume, AI-augmented cybercrime using "hacking as a service." 5. The business case for security: Predictive technology protects brand reputation and ensures process resilience (OT/IT uptime). This allows limited human resources to focus on high-level strategy rather than manual takedowns. Why Listen? If your security team is experiencing alert fatigue and "emergency room" burnout, this episode provides a roadmap for a more proactive future. Luigi Lenguito offers the executive insight necessary to understand how automation and preventive measures save millions of potential cybercrime victims every day. Love the show? Make sure to like, push, and subscribe to the Follow the Rabbit podcast! Links: You'll find Luigi on Linkedin [https://www.linkedin.com/in/llenguito/]. Here you can find more about BforeAI [https://bfore.ai/].

9. apr. 2026 - 28 min
episode #03: Botnets and the Hidden Threats in Our Homes cover

#03: Botnets and the Hidden Threats in Our Homes

In this episode of Follow the Rabbit, host Kofi Osae-Attah sits down with Octavia de Weerdt, the general director of NBIP. They discuss the pervasive rise of botnets and the invisible digital threats lurking in our living rooms. Octavia explains how our digital infrastructure, which we take pride in for its high-speed connectivity and smart home ecosystems, has become a double-edged sword. As we embrace digitalization, we inadvertently provide cybercrime networks with a massive, decentralized army of smart devices to power their next attack. The conversation delves into the "paradox of the smart home," revealing that everything from routers to connected coffee makers can be exploited by malicious actors. Octavia reveals how these botnets use our personal devices against us, often without our knowledge. She warns that, as the internet security landscape shifts, we must adopt a multi-stakeholder approach balancing technology, European policy, and shared responsibility between manufacturers and providers. Finally, Octavia highlights the unique Dutch model of collective resilience. By transforming a dense and vulnerable digital infrastructure into a collaborative defense network, the Netherlands is pioneering ways to mitigate cybercrime on a large scale. This episode is a wake-up call for everyone using the internet today. Understanding these hidden threats is the first step toward reclaiming our digital safety. TAKEAWAYS 1. The Invisible Army: Massive botnet armies are active across the internet at any given moment, using compromised smart devices to launch global attacks. 2. The "Smart" Vulnerability: Every unmanaged device in your home, from routers to IoT gadgets, is a potential target for cybercrime. 3. Double-Edged Infrastructure: While our advanced digital infrastructure drives the economy, it also provides attackers with the capacity and speed needed to generate sophisticated digital threats. 4. Shared Responsibility: Protecting the internet requires more than individual caution. It requires stronger European security policies and proactive device management from internet service providers (ISPs). 5. Collective Resilience: The NaWas model demonstrates the importance of not-for-profit, community-driven organizations in defending against volumetric and application-layer attacks. Why Listen? If you have a Wi-Fi router or smart devices in your home, you are on the front lines of a global digital war. Octavia De Weerdt breaks down the complex worlds of botnets and internet security in practical, insightful ways that are essential for anyone operating in our highly connected world. Don't forget to like, push, and subscribe to the Follow the Rabbit podcast! Join us as we explore the people and technology that protect the future of the internet. LINKS: You'll find Octavia on Linkedin [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ing-octavia-de-weerdt/]. Find more about the NBIP here [https://www.nbip.nl/en/]. Dive deeper into the NaWas project [https://www.nbip.nl/en/nawas/].

26. mar. 2026 - 23 min
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