logo
KnowBe4與Microsoft攜手因應危險網路行為

KnowBe4與Microsoft攜手因應危險網路行為

Business Wire4 days ago
佛羅里達州坦帕灣--(BUSINESS WIRE)--(美國商業資訊)-- 全面解決人為風險管理問題的網路安全平台KnowBe4今日宣布與Microsoft達成新的合作,將KnowBe4 SecurityCoach與Microsoft Edge for Business瀏覽器相整合。
瀏覽器安全威脅正愈演愈烈,全球網路安全專業人員應考慮採取措施來降低風險。Menlo Security的一份 報告 顯示,以瀏覽器為基礎的釣魚攻擊增加了140%。
SecurityCoach與Microsoft Edge for Business的整合將透過原生安全訊號利用瀏覽器活動,在偵測到危險網路行為後的數秒內提供有價值的學習機會。這些危險活動包括密碼重複使用、造訪被封鎖的網站或試圖繞過安全警告。身為少數在Microsoft Edge for Business中內建報告連接器的人為風險管理平台之一,此次整合將協助Microsoft生態系統內的組織實現其在KnowBe4上的投資價值最大化,同時打造更強大、更注重安全的企業環境。
KnowBe4產品策略副總裁Stuart Clark表示:「此次新整合提供了一個理想的契機,能將以人員為中心的網路安全風險轉化為可教育的時刻,最終協助更好地保護企業。此次整合延續了KnowBe4與Microsoft的創新合作——今年稍早,我們成功推出了KnowBe4 Defend與Microsoft Defender for Office 365的整合。它還彌合了企業技術防禦與使用者之間的差距,將最大的潛在漏洞轉化為最強的資產。我們期待向全球的SecurityCoach客戶提供這一功能,協助他們強化安全防護工作。」
Microsoft Edge for Business首席產品經理Arunesh Chandra表示:「隨著瀏覽器成為使用者的主要工作空間,保護這一關鍵端點至關重要。我們很高興看到KnowBe4 SecurityCoach與Microsoft Edge相整合,協助組織更好地管理人為風險並強化其安全態勢。」
相關資源:
閱讀關於此次新合作的 部落格 。
從6月發表的KnowBe4 Defend與Microsoft Defender for Office365整合 公告 中瞭解更多資訊。
關於 KnowBe4
KnowBe4致力於賦能員工每日做出更明智的安全決策。KnowBe4受到全球7萬多個組織的信賴,有助於強化安全文化和管理人為風險。KnowBe4為人類風險管理提供AI驅動的全面「最佳套件」平台,建立自我調整防禦層以強化使用者行為,抵禦最新的網路安全威脅。HRM+平台包括安全意識與法規遵循培訓、雲端電子郵件安全、即時指導、眾包反網路釣魚、AI防禦代理等模組。身為同類產品中唯一的全球安全平台,KnowBe4利用個人化和相關的網路安全保護內容、工具和技術來動員員工,使其從最大的攻擊面改變為企業最大的資產。如欲瞭解更多資訊,請造訪 knowbe4.com 。
請在 LinkedIn 和 X 上關注KnowBe4。
免責聲明:本公告之原文版本乃官方授權版本。譯文僅供方便瞭解之用,煩請參照原文,原文版本乃唯一具法律效力之版本。
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Blue-collar revenge: The things AI can't do are making a comeback
Blue-collar revenge: The things AI can't do are making a comeback

Axios

time5 minutes ago

  • Axios

Blue-collar revenge: The things AI can't do are making a comeback

AI is supposed to displace millions of workers in the coming years — but when your toilet won't flush at 2 am, you're not going to call ChatGPT. Why it matters: The reshaping of the American economy promises to offer a kind of revenge for the blue-collar laborer, as white-collar workers become largely dispensable, but the need for skilled trades only grows. The big picture: Companies are already boasting of saving hundreds of millions of dollars a year by using AI instead of humans. The stock market rewards are too enticing for the C-suite to ignore. But ask those same executives who's going to run the wiring for their data centers, or who's putting the roof on the building, and just how well those skilled technicians are getting paid. It's become a key Trump administration economic talking point: Blue-collar wages are rising faster now than at the start of any other administration going back to Nixon. Driving the news: A recent Microsoft paper analyzing the most "AI-proof" jobs generated a list of the work most and least vulnerable to the rise of the LLM. The 40 most-vulnerable jobs (translators, historians, sales reps, etc), basically all office work, employ about 11 million people. The 40 least-vulnerable jobs (dredge operators, roofers, etc.), just about all manual labor, employ around 5.5 million. All those extra folks have to go somewhere. What they're saying: "We've been telling kids for 15 years to code. 'Learn to code!' we said. Yeah, well, AI's coming for the coders. They're not coming for the welders. They're not coming for the plumbers. They're not coming for the steamfitters or the pipe fitters or the HVACs. They're not coming for the electricians," Mike Rowe, the TV host and skilled-trades philanthropist, said at Sen. Dave McCormick's (R-Pa.) AI summit last month. "There is a clear and present freak-out going on right now," Rowe said, as everyone from politicians to CEOs recognizes just how bad they need tradespeople to keep the economy running. Yes, but: While the AI boom will create lots of jobs for skilled trades, eventually there'll be less demand to build more data centers, which may in turns sap demand for those tradespeople too. The intrigue: There's already a labor shortage in many of these blue-collar professions, one that AI will, ironically, only make worse (think the electricians for the data centers, for example). Factories alone are short about 450,000 people a month, per the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM). "We're really talking about high-tech, 21st Century, rewarding, well-paying jobs," Jay Timmons, the CEO of the NAM, tells Axios. "Manufacturers are really embracing what's coming, and they accept the responsibility." Training is the answer, but that will require a large-scale, national effort —not just for up-and-coming students, but for mid-career folks forced into a pivot. "Everybody needs these roles, they're high-security roles," says Carolyn Lee, president of the NAM-affiliated Manufacturing Institute. She points, for example, to a program already in 16 states to train maintenance technicians to keep factories running — precisely the kind of job people like Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick have said are the future of the workforce. Students in an early cohort of that program, on average, were earning $95,000 a year within five years of graduating. One of the challenges, Timmons notes, is selling that to people who may not understand how lucrative these careers can be: "You have an economy-wide perception problem."

Beijing's hackers are playing the long game
Beijing's hackers are playing the long game

Axios

time5 minutes ago

  • Axios

Beijing's hackers are playing the long game

Chinese hackers are targeting more sensitive U.S. targets than ever — not to smash and grab, but to bide their time. Why it matters: Beijing is investing in stealthy, persistent access to U.S. systems — quietly building up its abilities to disrupt everything from federal agencies to water utilities in the event of escalation with Washington. Even the most routine spying campaign could leave China with backdoors to destruction for years to come. Driving the news: At least three China-based hacking groups exploited vulnerable SharePoint servers in the last month, according to Microsoft. Researchers at Eye Security, which first discovered the SharePoint flaws, estimates that more than 400 systems were compromised as part of the SharePoint attacks. In this case, hackers also stole machine keys. That means the attackers can regain access whenever they want — even after the system is patched — unless admins take rare manual steps to rotate keys. The big picture: China's state-linked hackers have been growing in sophistication over the last few years as they focus more on targeting technology and software providers with hundreds of customers, often including government agencies. By the numbers: More than 330 cyberattacks last year were linked to China, double the total from 2023, according to CrowdStrike data shared with the Washington Post. Those numbers continued to climb in early 2025, according to CrowdStrike. Between the lines: At least three major Chinese government teams have been targeting U.S. networks in recent years. Volt Typhoon has focused on breaking into endpoint detection tools to burrow deep into U.S. critical infrastructure, including pipelines, railways, ports and water utilities. Their goal is to maintain persistent access and be prepared to launch destructive attacks in the event of contingencies such as a war over Taiwan, experts say. Salt Typhoon, known for its compromises of global telecom networks, has focused on traditional espionage and spying. This group tapped cell phones belonging to President Trump, Vice President Vance and other top government officials. The FBI believes that threat is now "largely contained." Silk Typhoon — which has been linked to a recent breach of the U.S. Treasury Department and is known for the global 2021 Microsoft Exchange hacks — has been ramping up its work in recent months. The group uses previously undetected vulnerabilities, known as zero-days, to break into networks. Zoom in: Researchers at cybersecurity firm SentinelOne have uncovered more than 10 patents tied to Silk Typhoon's work — a rarity among nation-state hackers. The patents — detailed in a report published Thursday — suggest the group was at one point developing new offensive tools, including to encrypt endpoint data recovery, conduct phone and router forensics and decrypt hard drives. The researchers also found that Silk Typhoon has links to at least three private sector companies. The intrigue: Beijing's growing reliance on private contractors adds another layer of complexity — shielding state involvement while expanding capability. A DOJ indictment released last month details how the Shanghai State Security Bureau directed employees at tech companies to hack into computers across U.S. universities and businesses to steal information. A trove of leaked documents stolen from private Chinese contractor I-Soon early last year also highlighted how hired hackers targeted several U.S. government agencies, major newspapers and research universities. State of play: China's growing cyber prowess comes as the Trump administration has diminished resources for its own cyber defenses. At least a third of the workforce at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has left through voluntary buyouts, early retirements or layoffs. The Trump administration also wants to cut its budget. Yes, but: The administration is expected to invest heavily in its own offensive cyber powers — with $1 billion from the "One Big Beautiful Bill" heading to the Pentagon for just that purpose.

Federal District Court Issues Order Regarding Allied Gaming & Entertainment Combined 2024/2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders to Take Place As Planned on August 4th, 2025
Federal District Court Issues Order Regarding Allied Gaming & Entertainment Combined 2024/2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders to Take Place As Planned on August 4th, 2025

Associated Press

time27 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Federal District Court Issues Order Regarding Allied Gaming & Entertainment Combined 2024/2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders to Take Place As Planned on August 4th, 2025

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug 1, 2025-- Allied Gaming & Entertainment, Inc. (NASDAQ: AGAE) (the 'Company' or 'Allied'), a global experiential entertainment company, announced that the United States District Court for the Central District of California issued an order today that the Combined 2024/2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders ('Annual Meeting') not be postponed and enjoining Allied and Knighted Pastures LLC ('Knighted') from conducting any vote regarding changes to the composition of Allied's Board of Directors at the Annual Meeting. As such, the Annual Meeting will take place as planned on August 4, 2025, but no vote will be taken on any of the Company's or Knighted's director nominees or Knighted's proposal to remove Mr. Yangyang Li from the board of directors. All other proposals will continue to be voted on at the Annual Meeting. The Company encourages stockholders to vote their proxy card today 'FOR' the Company's proposals. Stockholders may vote electronically or by telephone until 11:59 p.m. eastern time on August 3, 2025, and may also vote at the meeting. About Allied Gaming & Entertainment Allied Gaming & Entertainment Inc. (Nasdaq: AGAE) is a global experiential entertainment company focused on providing a growing world of gamers and concertgoers with unique experiences through renowned assets, products and services. For more information, visit Forward Looking Statements This communication contains certain forward-looking statements under federal securities laws. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terminology such as 'may,' 'will,' 'should,' 'expect,' 'plan,' 'anticipate,' 'believe,' 'estimate,' 'predict,' 'potential,' 'intend' or 'continue,' the negative of such terms, or other comparable terminology. These statements are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors that may cause actual results to be materially different from those contemplated by the forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance, conditions or results, and involve a number of known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other important factors, many of which are outside our control, that could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those discussed in these forward-looking statements. The inclusion of such information should not be regarded as a representation by the Company, or any person, that the objectives of the Company will be achieved. View source version on CONTACT: Investor Contact: Addo Investor Relations [email protected] KEYWORD: NEW YORK UNITED STATES NORTH AMERICA INDUSTRY KEYWORD: PROFESSIONAL SERVICES ENTERTAINMENT BUSINESS OTHER ENTERTAINMENT EVENTS/CONCERTS ELECTRONIC GAMES SOURCE: Allied Gaming & Entertainment, Inc. Copyright Business Wire 2025. PUB: 08/01/2025 10:20 PM/DISC: 08/01/2025 10:19 PM

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store