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#cyberops — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #cyberops, aggregated by home.social.

  1. CIA elevates cyber division ⚠️
    More resources, direct leadership, stronger cyber ops
    Cyber now central to intel strategy

    💬 Your take?
    🔔 Follow TechNadu

    #InfoSec #CIA #CyberOps #ThreatIntel

  2. CIA elevates cyber division ⚠️
    More resources, direct leadership, stronger cyber ops
    Cyber now central to intel strategy

    💬 Your take?
    🔔 Follow TechNadu

    #InfoSec #CIA #CyberOps #ThreatIntel

  3. CIA elevates cyber division ⚠️
    More resources, direct leadership, stronger cyber ops
    Cyber now central to intel strategy

    💬 Your take?
    🔔 Follow TechNadu

    #InfoSec #CIA #CyberOps #ThreatIntel

  4. CIA elevates cyber division ⚠️
    More resources, direct leadership, stronger cyber ops
    Cyber now central to intel strategy

    💬 Your take?
    🔔 Follow TechNadu

    #InfoSec #CIA #CyberOps #ThreatIntel

  5. ----------------

    🔎 Threat Intelligence: CSIS Analysis of Iranian Cyber Activity

    Overview

    CSIS published an analysis titled “Demystifying Iranian Cyber Operations in the U.S.-Iran Conflict.” The piece presents a structured review of Iranian cyber operations within the specific geopolitical frame of U.S.–Iran tensions. The report’s focus is on clarifying what Iranian-linked cyber activity looks like, how it has been observed in recent engagements, and how analysts interpret capabilities and intent.

    Scope and Focus

    The analysis covers state-linked activity attributed to Iranian actors, operational patterns observed in incidents tied to the U.S.–Iran dynamic, and broader strategic considerations. It frames activities in terms of capabilities, target selection, and operational behavior rather than presenting raw IoCs or exhaustive technical signatures.

    Methodology and Evidence

    CSIS structures its findings around open-source reporting, incident chronology, and publicly available assessments. The report emphasizes contextualizing cyber events within diplomatic and kinetic interactions between Iran and the United States. Where the analysis references technical activity, it aims to describe observable patterns and high-level capabilities rather than publishing actionable indicators.

    Key Themes Presented
    • Examination of state-linked cyber capabilities attributed to Iranian actors, including persistent access and opportunistic disruptive actions.
    • Discussion of target profiles across government, critical infrastructure, and symbolic targets related to geopolitical signaling.
    • Consideration of how cyber operations intersect with conventional and informational instruments of state power.

    Limitations Noted in the Analysis

    The report is presented as an analytical demystification; it does not serve as a technical IOC repository. It focuses on interpretation and synthesis of public reporting and does not claim to reveal classified forensic details.

    Concluding Frame

    CSIS’s analysis aims to make Iranian cyber operations more intelligible to policy and security audiences by clarifying what has been observed and how those activities fit within the broader conflict dynamic. The report prioritizes operational patterns and strategic context over granular technical disclosure.

    🔹 CSIS #ThreatIntelligence #Iran #CyberOps #Geopolitics

    🔗 Source: csis.org/analysis/demystifying

  6. ----------------

    🔎 Threat Intelligence: CSIS Analysis of Iranian Cyber Activity

    Overview

    CSIS published an analysis titled “Demystifying Iranian Cyber Operations in the U.S.-Iran Conflict.” The piece presents a structured review of Iranian cyber operations within the specific geopolitical frame of U.S.–Iran tensions. The report’s focus is on clarifying what Iranian-linked cyber activity looks like, how it has been observed in recent engagements, and how analysts interpret capabilities and intent.

    Scope and Focus

    The analysis covers state-linked activity attributed to Iranian actors, operational patterns observed in incidents tied to the U.S.–Iran dynamic, and broader strategic considerations. It frames activities in terms of capabilities, target selection, and operational behavior rather than presenting raw IoCs or exhaustive technical signatures.

    Methodology and Evidence

    CSIS structures its findings around open-source reporting, incident chronology, and publicly available assessments. The report emphasizes contextualizing cyber events within diplomatic and kinetic interactions between Iran and the United States. Where the analysis references technical activity, it aims to describe observable patterns and high-level capabilities rather than publishing actionable indicators.

    Key Themes Presented
    • Examination of state-linked cyber capabilities attributed to Iranian actors, including persistent access and opportunistic disruptive actions.
    • Discussion of target profiles across government, critical infrastructure, and symbolic targets related to geopolitical signaling.
    • Consideration of how cyber operations intersect with conventional and informational instruments of state power.

    Limitations Noted in the Analysis

    The report is presented as an analytical demystification; it does not serve as a technical IOC repository. It focuses on interpretation and synthesis of public reporting and does not claim to reveal classified forensic details.

    Concluding Frame

    CSIS’s analysis aims to make Iranian cyber operations more intelligible to policy and security audiences by clarifying what has been observed and how those activities fit within the broader conflict dynamic. The report prioritizes operational patterns and strategic context over granular technical disclosure.

    🔹 CSIS #ThreatIntelligence #Iran #CyberOps #Geopolitics

    🔗 Source: csis.org/analysis/demystifying

  7. Budget cuts halved CISA’s analyst headcount and forced threat‐team merges, prompting a leadership change. The signal is clear: sustained staffing and stable governance are essential for resilient infrastructure protection. 🔧 #CISA #CyberOps – Powered by FG

  8. Deep web = legitimate private data.
    Dark web = anonymous hidden forums where cybercriminals often collaborate, trade tools, and share operational knowledge.

    We explored the top forums, the role of reputation systems, escrow protections, and verification processes - all of which help shape the underground threat landscape.

    Thoughts on how defenders should approach monitoring these ecosystems responsibly?
    Follow @technadu for more technical cybersecurity coverage.

    #InfoSec #CyberSecurity #ThreatIntel #DarkWeb #DeepWeb #OSINT #CyberOps #TechNadu

  9. Deep web = legitimate private data.
    Dark web = anonymous hidden forums where cybercriminals often collaborate, trade tools, and share operational knowledge.

    We explored the top forums, the role of reputation systems, escrow protections, and verification processes - all of which help shape the underground threat landscape.

    Thoughts on how defenders should approach monitoring these ecosystems responsibly?
    Follow @technadu for more technical cybersecurity coverage.

    #InfoSec #CyberSecurity #ThreatIntel #DarkWeb #DeepWeb #OSINT #CyberOps #TechNadu

  10. Deep web = legitimate private data.
    Dark web = anonymous hidden forums where cybercriminals often collaborate, trade tools, and share operational knowledge.

    We explored the top forums, the role of reputation systems, escrow protections, and verification processes - all of which help shape the underground threat landscape.

    Thoughts on how defenders should approach monitoring these ecosystems responsibly?
    Follow @technadu for more technical cybersecurity coverage.

    #InfoSec #CyberSecurity #ThreatIntel #DarkWeb #DeepWeb #OSINT #CyberOps #TechNadu

  11. Deep web = legitimate private data.
    Dark web = anonymous hidden forums where cybercriminals often collaborate, trade tools, and share operational knowledge.

    We explored the top forums, the role of reputation systems, escrow protections, and verification processes - all of which help shape the underground threat landscape.

    Thoughts on how defenders should approach monitoring these ecosystems responsibly?
    Follow @technadu for more technical cybersecurity coverage.

    #InfoSec #CyberSecurity #ThreatIntel #DarkWeb #DeepWeb #OSINT #CyberOps #TechNadu

  12. Deep web = legitimate private data.
    Dark web = anonymous hidden forums where cybercriminals often collaborate, trade tools, and share operational knowledge.

    We explored the top forums, the role of reputation systems, escrow protections, and verification processes - all of which help shape the underground threat landscape.

    Thoughts on how defenders should approach monitoring these ecosystems responsibly?
    Follow @technadu for more technical cybersecurity coverage.

    #InfoSec #CyberSecurity #ThreatIntel #DarkWeb #DeepWeb #OSINT #CyberOps #TechNadu

  13. How do you uncover the infrastructure behind state sponsored ransomware? DomainTools analysts used domain risk scoring and pivots off of DNS artifacts to expose hidden connections between Russian-affiliated threat groups. Read the full investigation: dti.domaintools.com/mapping-hi

    #ThreatIntelligence #APT #Ransomware #DomainTools #CyberOps

  14. How do you uncover the infrastructure behind state sponsored ransomware? DomainTools analysts used domain risk scoring and pivots off of DNS artifacts to expose hidden connections between Russian-affiliated threat groups. Read the full investigation: dti.domaintools.com/mapping-hi

    #ThreatIntelligence #APT #Ransomware #DomainTools #CyberOps

  15. How do you uncover the infrastructure behind state sponsored ransomware? DomainTools analysts used domain risk scoring and pivots off of DNS artifacts to expose hidden connections between Russian-affiliated threat groups. Read the full investigation: dti.domaintools.com/mapping-hi

    #ThreatIntelligence #APT #Ransomware #DomainTools #CyberOps

  16. How do you uncover the infrastructure behind state sponsored ransomware? DomainTools analysts used domain risk scoring and pivots off of DNS artifacts to expose hidden connections between Russian-affiliated threat groups. Read the full investigation: dti.domaintools.com/mapping-hi

    #ThreatIntelligence #APT #Ransomware #DomainTools #CyberOps

  17. How do you uncover the infrastructure behind state sponsored ransomware? DomainTools analysts used domain risk scoring and pivots off of DNS artifacts to expose hidden connections between Russian-affiliated threat groups. Read the full investigation: dti.domaintools.com/mapping-hi

    #ThreatIntelligence #APT #Ransomware #DomainTools #CyberOps

  18. 🇮🇹 A heartfelt thank you to Italy, my home country, for standing strong behind the BashCore project.

    Seeing it grow here means the world to me.
    From the Alps to Sicily, tech passion is alive and real.

    Grazie a tutti!

    #BashCore #Italy #Linux #CyberOps #LiveOS #Grazie #OpenSource

  19. 🇮🇹 A heartfelt thank you to Italy, my home country, for standing strong behind the BashCore project.

    Seeing it grow here means the world to me.
    From the Alps to Sicily, tech passion is alive and real.

    Grazie a tutti!

    #BashCore #Italy #Linux #CyberOps #LiveOS #Grazie #OpenSource

  20. 🇮🇹 A heartfelt thank you to Italy, my home country, for standing strong behind the BashCore project.

    Seeing it grow here means the world to me.
    From the Alps to Sicily, tech passion is alive and real.

    Grazie a tutti!

    #BashCore #Italy #Linux #CyberOps #LiveOS #Grazie #OpenSource

  21. 🇮🇹 A heartfelt thank you to Italy, my home country, for standing strong behind the BashCore project.

    Seeing it grow here means the world to me.
    From the Alps to Sicily, tech passion is alive and real.

    Grazie a tutti!

    #BashCore #Italy #Linux #CyberOps #LiveOS #Grazie #OpenSource