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On this episode of The Cybersecurity Defenders Podcast we speak with Philippe Humeau, CEO of CrowdSec, about Multimodal Offensive Artificial Intelligence (MOAI).Philippe is a cybersecurity expert and seasoned entrepreneur with a deep passion for enhancing global internet security. He is the founder and CEO of CrowdSec, an innovative open-source platform that harnesses the power of community-driven threat intelligence to protect systems worldwide. Philippe's work focuses on collaborative approaches to cybersecurity, ensuring that organizations can stay ahead of evolving threats by pooling collective knowledge and resources. With years of experience building solutions that address complex security challenges, Philippe has made a significant impact on the field.Before founding CrowdSec, Philippe successfully launched and led several companies within the cybersecurity space, further cementing his reputation as a thought leader and innovator. His journey reflects a commitment to addressing the most pressing challenges in the digital age, from fostering safer internet ecosystems to empowering businesses with the tools they need to defend against cyberattacks. Philippe is also an advocate for open-source technology and community-driven solutions, underscoring his belief that collaboration is key to combating global threats.
An MFA outage affects Microsoft 365 Office apps. The Biden administration introduces new export controls to block adversaries from accessing advanced AI chips. A Dutch university cancels lectures after a cyberattack. Three Russian nationals have been indicted for operating cryptocurrency mixers. Juniper Networks releases security updates for Junos OS. Spain's largest telecommunications company confirms a data breach. The “Banshee” infostealer leverages a stolen Apple encryption algorithm. Researchers uncover a novel ransomware campaign targeting Amazon S3 buckets. A major data broker suffers a major data breach. Our guest Philippe Humeau, CEO and Founder of CrowdSec, shares the biggest issues currently facing cybersecurity and how open-source cybersecurity platforms combat them. The weirdness of AI. Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our daily intelligence roundup, Daily Briefing, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow CyberWire Daily on LinkedIn. CyberWire Guest Our guest Philippe Humeau, CEO and Founder of CrowdSec, shares the biggest issues currently facing cybersecurity and how open-source cybersecurity platforms combat them. Selected Reading Microsoft MFA outage blocking access to Microsoft 365 apps (Bleeping Computer) White House Moves to Restrict AI Chip Exports (GovInfo Security) New Ransomware Group Uses AI to Develop Nefarious Tools (Infosecurity Magazine) Cyberattack forces Dutch university to cancel lectures (The Record) 3 Russians Indicted for Operating Blender.io and Sinbad.io Crypto Mixers (Hackread) Juniper Networks Fixes High-Severity Vulnerabilities in Junos OS (SecurityWeek) Aviatrix Controller RCE Vulnerability Exploited In The Wild (Cyber Security News) Hackers Exploiting YouTube to Spread Malware That Steals Browser Data (GB Hackers) Banshee 2.0 Malware Steals Apple's Encryption to Hide on Macs (Dark Reading) A breach of a data broker's trove of location data threatens the privacy of millions (TechCrunch) Abusing AWS Native Services: Ransomware Encrypting S3 Buckets with SSE-C (Halcyon) AI Mistakes Are Very Different Than Human Mistakes (IEEE Spectrum) Share your feedback. We want to ensure that you are getting the most out of the podcast. Please take a few minutes to share your thoughts with us by completing our brief listener survey as we continually work to improve the show. Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at cyberwire@n2k.com to request more info. The CyberWire is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Send us a textYou've probably heard of the concept of 'the power of the crowd' - in this episode of the Mastering Risk Management podcast, we hear about it being put to good use to battle the scourge of our online world - cyber criminals & state-sponsored hackers.Our guest is Philippe Humeau, Founder and CEO of CrowdSec an open source, multiplayer firewall that analyses visitor behaviour and provides adapted responses to all kinds of attacks. With more than 250,000 installations across in excess of 180 countries clearly, it's an approach that works.You'll hear about Philippe's extensive experience, from the time he got 'fired' from school, right through to his articulation of the complex, not complicated, problem that is cyber security.Every organisation is exposed to this risk - should your business be part of the group effort to minimise the impact of this crime? I commend you to listen to the episode before you answer! Contact ABM Risk Partnership to optimise your risk management approach: email us: info@abmrisk.com.au Tweet us at @4RiskCme Visit our LinkedIn page https://www.linkedin.com/company/18394064/admin/ Thanks for listening to the show and please keep your guest suggestions coming!
Welcome to "To The Point Cybersecurity," the podcast where we dive deep into the most pressing issues in global cybersecurity, explore emerging threats, and discuss innovative solutions. In this episode, titled "E302 - Philippe_mixdown," our hosts Rachael Lyon and Vince Spina welcome Philippe Humeau, CEO of CrowdSec, an expert in adaptive cybersecurity measures. Philippe brings to light the evolving challenges of managing IP reputations and the complexities cybercriminals face in influencing systems globally. He critiques the traditional use of honeypots and advocates for the richer insights gained from real-world data. Philippe delves into the use of data science and deep learning to detect and block malicious IPs, emphasizing adaptive and dynamic firewall systems over static rules. Rachael and Vince guide the conversation through various intriguing topics, from the economic and logistical difficulties of mass manipulation by attackers to the importance of crowdsourcing and collaboration in defense strategies. Philippe's thoughts on AI's escalating role in cybersecurity, the need for shared intelligence, and the impactful concept of multiplayer firewalls are discussed at length. For links and resources discussed in this episode, please visit our show notes at https://www.forcepoint.com/govpodcast/e301
NEW! Text Us Direct Here!Philippe Humeau joins us to discuss new crowdsourcing approaches to security. Phillippe is a former Hacker and Founder of CrowdSec, an crowd-sourced WAZE-Like Security platform. Learn more here: https://crowdsec.netAccelerate your CMMC 2.0 compliance and address federal zero-trust requirements with Kiteworks' universal, secure file sharing platform made for every organization, and helpful to defense contractors. Visit kiteworks.com to get started. We're thrilled to introduce Season 5 Cyber Flash Points to show what latest tech news means to online safety with short stories helping spread security awareness and the importance of online privacy protection."Cyber Flash Points" – your go-to source for practical and concise summaries.So, tune in and welcome to "Cyber Flash Points”
In this episode, host Bidemi Ologunde spoke with Philippe Humeau, the Founder of CrowdSec, an open-source security automation tool designed to protect websites, servers, and services from various types of cyber attacks. CrowdSec's core functionality revolves around analyzing logs from different sources (like web servers, firewalls, and system logs) to detect malicious behavior in real-time. Support the show
In an era where digital threats loom large, how do AI, cybersecurity, and open-source innovations intersect to redefine our approach to privacy? Join us in this riveting episode of the FIT4PRIVACY Podcast, where Philippe Humeau and Punit Bhatia delve into the dynamics of cutting-edge cybersecurity strategies. Discover the role of multiplayer firewalls in thwarting zero-day attacks and the strategies to combat the 'divide and conquer' tactics of cyber adversaries. Listen in as Philippe shares his insights on the escalating scale of IP attacks and practical tips for individuals to shield their data in the digital battleground. Tune in to Episode 108, Season 5, for a deep dive into the world of cybersecurity, where innovation meets defense. KEY CONVERSATION POINT 00:00:00 Intro 00:01:37 How Does AI Impact the Cyber Security and Privacy Landscape? 00:05:06 Can AI generate good quality code? 00:07:09 How to minimize cyber risk or limit the zero-day attacks in multiplayer firewalls and why is it important? 00:11:26 Why IP attacks are increasing in scale? 00:17:37 Is CrowdSec Open Source? 00:19:45 What is the Legal Basis to Believe that CrowdSec is in Compliance with GDPR? Listen in as Philippe shares his insights on the escalating scale of IP attack ABOUT THE GUEST Philippe Humeau stands at the forefront of a revolutionary approach to cybersecurity. Moving away from the traditional, resource-heavy strategies, he champions the collaborative "bee hive" approach through CrowdSec. This innovative tactic leverages the collective power of a vast network, sharing real-time data on aggressor IPs, thus creating a dynamic and responsive map of cyber threats. With an impressive background spanning the creation and contribution to five companies and investments in fifteen more, Philippe's expertise extends beyond cybersecurity. His prior experience in penetration testing, coupled with a decade refining his marketing and business acumen, positions him as a thought leader in the field. Philippe's role at CrowdSec isn't just about building defenses; it's about spearheading a collaborative movement to secure the digital realm, from personal data to national security. Join the movement and be part of the solution with Philippe Emir and CrowdSec. ABOUT THE HOST Punit Bhatia is one of the leading privacy experts who works independently and has worked with professionals in over 30 countries. Punit works with business and privacy leaders to create an organization culture with high privacy awareness and compliance as a business priority. Selectively, Punit is open to mentor and coach privacy professionals. Punit is the author of books “Be Ready for GDPR” which was rated as the best GDPR Book, “AI & Privacy – How to Find Balance”, “Intro To GDPR”, and “Be an Effective DPO”. Punit is a global speaker who has spoken at over 30 global events. Punit is the creator and host of the FIT4PRIVACY Podcast. This podcast has been featured amongst top GDPR and privacy podcasts. As a person, Punit is an avid thinker and believes in thinking, believing, and acting in line with one's value to have joy in life. He has developed the philosophy named ‘ABC for joy of life' which passionately shares. Punit is based out of Belgium, the heart of Europe. RESOURCES Websites www.fit4privacy.com , www.punitbhatia.com Podcast https://www.fit4privacy.com/podcast Blog https://www.fit4privacy.com/blog YouTube http://youtube.com/fit4privacy --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/fit4privacy/message
Today Laura and Kevin are joined by Philippe Humeau to chat about crowdsourcing cyber security. They discuss the pros and cons of opensource software for cyber security, the consensus algorithm, Captain America Syndrome, the true scale of Cyber Crime, whether being hacked boils down to a budget problem, renting alpacas, hugging alpacas, alpaca clothing and then even debate what foreign language Laura needs to learn in 2024!Philippe Humeau is an IT security engineer and founder of CrowdSec. He is from Paris, France. He founded his first company at the same time and quickly oriented it towards penetration testing and high-security hosting. He was also deeply involved in Magento's community creation & animation in France and versed in eCommerce (wrote 4 books on the topic).In 2020, he founded CrowdSec, a company editing an eponymous open-source and collaborative IPS, leveraging both IP behavior & reputation to create a community and tackle the mass scale hacking problem. His crushes will forever be IT security, DevSecOps, and entrepreneurship.
Cybersecurity has never been more important; Everything is now connected to a network, and rapid technological advancements are being met with new and novel cyber threats, however cutting-edge advancements in AI within cybersecurity are rising to meet them, empowering individuals, businesses, and governments to build a safer, more secure online future. In this podcast, we examine the importance of collaboration between public and private players to safeguard society, critical infrastructure and valuable assets against increasingly sophisticated cyber threats.In the fourth episode of this five-part miniseries, we look at AI's role within cybersecurity. By making cybersecurity accessible to more people, can AI increase the protections for European organisations and businesses of all sizes or will the ability to process large amounts of data enable attacks on businesses?In this episode we speak with Philippe Humeau, CEO of CrowdSec, a French threat intelligence company that offers participative behavioural protection from malicious IP addresses. Isabel Praça, Professor at the Instituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto and AI Expert at European Union Agency for Cybersecurity. Vicente Diaz, Author of VirusTotal's research on AI-driven threat mitigation and detection and security engineer at Google.Our sources: IBM, Cobalt, Digital Skills Job Europe, Morgan StanleyThis content is paid for by Google and is produced in partnership with the Financial Times' Commercial Department. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Malevolent attacks on data are rising. Misuse of data is an increasingly sophisticated criminal industry. How to defend? Philippe Humeau, a founder and the CEO of CrowdSec (CrowdSec - The open-source & collaborative security suite) is our guest. He explains how an open-source approach to editing a collaborative security stack for identifying and sharing malicious IP addresses across a community of users can be a powerful force for good in protecting data against mal-actors. This episode explores how malevolent data attacks occur and are expanding, how malicious IP addresses can be identified and shared, and how building a community defense can make the internet a safer place for everyone. Learn how open source can improve defenses, how multilayer firewalls function, how VPN's are addressed in the defense of data. Receive top tips for organizations and individuals on how to protect personal and organizational data. Time stamps: 03:08 - Malevolent Data Actors 08:03 - Can an open source platform defend against malactors? 10:26 - Multi-player firewall 11:58 - Top tips for organizations/businesses 13:56 - Tips for individuals
Today we interview Shane Sims, CEO of Kivu Consulting. We'll be talking about the current state of cybercrime and insights from incidents his consulting firm has recently worked. We'll discuss some of the latest stats and trends related to ransomware, as well as thoughts on future cybercrime trends. Shane will also share some stories from his time as an FBI agent, working undercover as a cybercriminal. Segment Resources: Report - Mitigating Ransomware Risk: Determining Optimal Strategies for Business One of the biggest challenges in security today is organizations' reluctance to share attack information. Perhaps legal teams are worried about liability, or maybe execs are just embarrassed about security failures. Whatever the reason, this trend makes it difficult for organizations to help each other. CrowdSec's mission is to make this process automated, anonymized, and seamless for security teams. We talk to Phillip Humeau, one of CrowdSec's founders, about what it's like to build a such an unconventional cybersecurity business - one based around crowdsourcing and open source software. This week, in the enterprise security news, AI dominates new funding rounds (I'm shocked. This is my shocked face.) The buyer's market continues, with lots of small acquisitions SingTel sells off Trustwave at a significant loss Yubico goes public (actually, a month ago, sorry we missed it) Yubico can also now ship pre-registered security keys New cybersecurity tools for board and exec-level folks Lessons learned from recent ransomware attacks Healthcare is increasingly under attack A study on CISO tenure - longer than you might think! Don't miss today's squirrel stories at the end! All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-336
Today we interview Shane Sims, CEO of Kivu Consulting. We'll be talking about the current state of cybercrime and insights from incidents his consulting firm has recently worked. We'll discuss some of the latest stats and trends related to ransomware, as well as thoughts on future cybercrime trends. Shane will also share some stories from his time as an FBI agent, working undercover as a cybercriminal. Segment Resources: Report - Mitigating Ransomware Risk: Determining Optimal Strategies for Business One of the biggest challenges in security today is organizations' reluctance to share attack information. Perhaps legal teams are worried about liability, or maybe execs are just embarrassed about security failures. Whatever the reason, this trend makes it difficult for organizations to help each other. CrowdSec's mission is to make this process automated, anonymized, and seamless for security teams. We talk to Phillip Humeau, one of CrowdSec's founders, about what it's like to build a such an unconventional cybersecurity business - one based around crowdsourcing and open source software. This week, in the enterprise security news, AI dominates new funding rounds (I'm shocked. This is my shocked face.) The buyer's market continues, with lots of small acquisitions SingTel sells off Trustwave at a significant loss Yubico goes public (actually, a month ago, sorry we missed it) Yubico can also now ship pre-registered security keys New cybersecurity tools for board and exec-level folks Lessons learned from recent ransomware attacks Healthcare is increasingly under attack A study on CISO tenure - longer than you might think! Don't miss today's squirrel stories at the end! All that and more, on this episode of Enterprise Security Weekly. Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-336
One of the biggest challenges in security today is organizations' reluctance to share attack information. Perhaps legal teams are worried about liability, or maybe execs are just embarrassed about security failures. Whatever the reason, this trend makes it difficult for organizations to help each other. CrowdSec's mission is to make this process automated, anonymized, and seamless for security teams. We talk to Phillip Humeau, one of CrowdSec's founders, about what it's like to build a such an unconventional cybersecurity business - one based around crowdsourcing and open source software. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-336
One of the biggest challenges in security today is organizations' reluctance to share attack information. Perhaps legal teams are worried about liability, or maybe execs are just embarrassed about security failures. Whatever the reason, this trend makes it difficult for organizations to help each other. CrowdSec's mission is to make this process automated, anonymized, and seamless for security teams. We talk to Phillip Humeau, one of CrowdSec's founders, about what it's like to build a such an unconventional cybersecurity business - one based around crowdsourcing and open source software. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-336
Welcome to the Scale with Strive Podcast, the place where you come to listen to some of the worlds most influential leaders of the SaaS industry!I am your host, Adam Richardson and on today's episode, we are joined by Philippe Humeau, a trained engineer who ventured into the world of entrepreneurship from the young age of 23. Having sold his previous company around 7 years ago, he then co-founded Crowdsec, a Series A Cyber Security company that leverages the power of community to drive value for its customers. He has worn many hats over his career, including CEO, CTO, CSO and CMO roles. It is clear that he is a true all-rounder and that really shows in our conversation today. Philippe has a way of taking a complicated subject such as cyber security and making it sound simple – and we think you will love some of his analogies too! Some of my key takeaways that I think will resonate with you as listener were:
Philippe Humeau is the CEO and Co-Founder of CrowdSec, an open-source security company with a very unique business model that doesn't fit the usual open source patterns. Philippe talked about how to focus on providing a fair exchange of value between maintainers / open source companies and users, and how to monetize a project that is providing value for free.Philippe also talked about why he thinks open-source founders are under more pressure to get their business model right at the start, tips on making the right hiring decisions, and how to communicate with the community in an effective and transparent way. I also liked Philippe's cynicism: why he views open source as primarily a pragmatic choice for his business, given the type of company he wanted to build. Philippe also shares the logic behind his uncommon view that only making certain features available to paying customers isn't a truly open-source business strategy. Highlights: I introduce Philippe, who gives some background on his career journey and what he does at CrowdSec (00:22) Philippe explains why it seems that security companies are underrepresented in the open-source space (03:19) The most common mistake Philippe sees when people start an open-source business (05:03) Why Philippe believes that open-source companies are under more pressure to get their business model right the first time (09:26) How Philippe came up with Crowdsec's unique business model (16:15) The pushback that Philippe got when he presented his business model initially (19:33) Why Philippe views open source as a means to an end, and how that has affected his choices at CrowdSec (25:10) The most interesting mistake Philippe has made since starting CrowdSec (27:28) Why Philippe believes open source business models are more promising than closed source (31:19) The advice that Philippe would give to an open source founder who is looking to build a successful company (34:11) Why Philippe feels that having certain features behind a paywall is not a truly open-source business model (35:53) Where you can learn more about Philippe and connect with CrowdSec (40:11) Links:Philippe LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/philippe_humeau Company: https://www.crowdsec.net/
What a unique and valuable time. We chat with Philippe Humeau, the CEO and co-founder of CrowdSec (crowdsec.net). CrowdSec is an open-source & collaborative IPS able to analyze visitor behavior by parsing logs & provide an adapted response to all kinds of attacks. The game-changer is that the solution also enables users to protect each other. Each time an IP is blocked, all community members are informed so they can also block it. That way, they are generating a real-time crowdsourced CTI database. We'll be working together to create an integration with Microsoft Sentinel. Stay tuned for a future update. Show Notes/Links: CrowdSec Basic Steps to Create Your Own Simple Copilot Bing Chat Enterprise, your AI-powered chat for work, available in Microsoft Edge sidebar Microsoft adds a 'Security Copilot' to its AI assistant line-up Microsoft puts a price tag on its AI "copilots" for business Want to watch the live show? You can always go back and watch this episode and others on our YouTube channel. Subscribe today!
Discover the latest episode of our business podcast, where we delve into an engaging conversation with Philippe Humeau, founder and CEO of Crowdsec. As an experienced entrepreneur and investor, Philippe shares his unique insights into the world of open-source projects and cybersecurity.In this must-listen episode, Philippe discusses the importance of establishing fair trade in the open-source community, emphasizing the need for professionalization and sustainability. "You get something, I get something. Everybody knows that I'm sustainable because I earn money. I can pay good professionals to maintain the software you can build on it."Philippe also reveals the intriguing strategy of "back casting," which has helped him define the roadmap for Crowdsec's success. "I want to sell this company a billion dollars. This is public. I'm not hiding anything here. So one day, Google, one day, I don't know, Cloudflare, Amazon, whomever will buy us, because we will have the real-time map of all aggressive IP addresses over the Internet. And that has a price, my friend. And it's going to be a billion dollars, trust me."Don't miss this opportunity to learn from a seasoned entrepreneur and cybersecurity expert. In the episode, Philippe passionately invites listeners to join Crowdsec's "army" and help make the Internet a safer place. "It's about making the Internet a safer place. It's about being safer together."Tune in now to hear Philippe Humeau's incredible story and gain valuable insights into the world of open-source projects and cybersecurity!
Fight Cybercriminals by Building A Bigger Army Cybersecurity is an important factor in the modern era. Many engagements and transactions are done online which draws in cybercriminals to become more creative, thus, a solution to these threats, according to Philippe, building a bigger army and outnumber these threats altogether. Do their work and create chaos. Our guest, Philippe Humeau, is creating a network that will help address cyber threats. How is this helping fight cybercrime? Stay tuned to find out. Who is Philippe Humeau? Philippe Humeau is the CEO of CrowdSec, his objective is to create a network to fight cybercriminals. In 2019, he introduced the concept of creating an open-source security engine, to tackle the mass-scale hacking problem. It's a crowd-sourcing security software that is open sourced and free! Innermost Superpower Philippe's innermost superpower is convincing people. His skills give him more credibility which will put more eyes on him and what he does. Pullout Quotes: “The first friction to adoption is money so we wanted to be free for the largest amount of people on earth and the point for that is that our value doesn't come from the software” “Some others were not given the opportunity the education or the luck to be able to do this so it's a strong driver…that I can get people to believe in this dream before it actually was a reality…” “When you fight against an army you need a bigger army and as a matter of fact we outnumber them ten thousand to one the only thing we do is a tool to leverage is unfair.” Chapters Stamps: 00:00 Intro 00:27 Who is Philippe Humeau? 03:47 What does Philippe do to fight cyber criminals? 06:00 How does the system works? 09:50 How Do you set up this in the clients' system? 13:03 How Does VPN Works with the technology 18:09 Vulnerability and Benefits of using this cybersecurity tech 23:47 What is Repeat Entrepreneur? 25:52 Innermost Superpower: Convincing 28:45 Philippe's Advice for Entrepreneurs Socials Website: https://www.crowdsec.net/ Linkedin: linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau Twitter: https://twitter.com/philippe_humeau Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@crowdsec6295/ Email: info@crowdsec.net
I interviewed Philippe Humeau, CEO and co-founder at CrowdSec. He is creating the Waze for cybersecurity. If one firewall is having issues, the product can see the machines having the same issues and then block the IP. The product is free, but CrowdSec will monetize the product by selling the signals to end users. CrowdSec, a Paris, France-based Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) solution, announced raised €14 million in Series A funding round led by Supernova Invest, with participation from Breega. CrowdSec intends to use this fresh capital to increase its staff from 20 to 45 individuals, strengthen its technical stack, ramp up revenues, extend its U.S. operations, and expand its global network of protected, collaborating devices from several hundred thousand to millions. Founded December 2019 Virtual workforce but mostly in France North star KPI is number of installs Staff of 24 and growing Targeting 1.5M Euros ARR €14M Series A Seed round easy, Series A hard Philippe Humeau's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/ SaaS Fundraising Story: https://www.thesaasnews.com/news/crowdsec-raises-14-million-in-series-a
In today's episode of Category Visionaries, we speak with Philippe Humeau, CEO of CrowdSec, a cyber security startup building a neighborhood watch for the internet era, leveraging collaboration and mutual benefit to optimize protection against contemporary online threats. By identifying aggressive IP addresses and bad actors in real time, and sharing that information with users, the bulk of your security legwork can be taken care of before the threat ever reaches your servers. It's this powerful security infrastructure which has helped CrowdCec secure 110,000 users in just two years, and be well on the way to their first million. Topics Discussed: How cracking computer games at school led Philippe to a career in cybersecurity How security needs have changed in the ransomware era, and what aggressive security means for your business Why selling signals is a massive market, and how CrowdSec manages to stay free to use PLG as the idea growth strategy for small businesses, but why it might not always be scalable Market innovation and enterprise categories - why detecting trends is different from imposing them Cybersecurity's high burn rate, and why if you want software maintained well you need to pay a top-level salary Favorite book: Thinking, Fast and Slow
Hacking is big business for cybersecurity criminals. Hackers get into your companies' network, hold the information at ransom, then charge that organization a fee to get the information back. CrowdSec CEO, Philippe Humeau, joins BreakNBread and outlines his solution on how to fight these cybercriminals. Also, find out the real reason why some corporations are not a fan of you working from home. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Interview de Philippe Humeau, co-fondateur et CEO de CrowdSec.
It seems like the adversaries have all the advantages stacked in their favor. They can attack any time, and only need to get lucky once to breach our cloud investments. On the other hand, we have to ensure that our cloud infrastructure is always secure. So what can we do about this complicated problem? We speak with Philippe Humeau of CrowdSec to understand how we can leverage our numbers as a countermeasure. Along the way, we also discuss social engineering, and how we can safeguard against phishing attacks. Tune in to this episode to also hear:
In this episode I talk with Philippe Humeau the CEO of CrowdSec, a company that is revolutionizing firewall security. We had a fantastic conversation and I hope everyone enjoys it! If you enjoy the podcast please go leave a review on the platform you listen, like it & share the podcast. You can also follow the podcast on social media at the links below.Follow the Podcast on Social Media!Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/secunfpodcast/Twitter: https://twitter.com/SecUnfPodcastPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/SecurityUnfilteredPodcastPhilippe's Links:https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/https://www.crowdsec.net/https://twitter.com/philippe_humeauToday in Manufacturing Inside the biggest stories impacting U.S. manufacturing.Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify Sales Bluebird for leaders and go-to-market teams at cyber security startupsTips, tricks, ideas and inspiration from legendary cyber security CEOs and CROsListen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify The Real Estate UnSalespersonNot a natural born salesperson? Don't consider yourself to be a "salesy”? Welcome!Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the show
In this episode I talk with Philippe Humeau the CEO of CrowdSec, a company that is revolutionizing firewall security. We had a fantastic conversation and I hope everyone enjoys it! If you enjoy the podcast please go leave a review on the platform you listen, like it & share the podcast. You can also follow the podcast on social media at the links below.Follow the Podcast on Social Media!Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/secunfpodcast/Twitter: https://twitter.com/SecUnfPodcastPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/SecurityUnfilteredPodcastPhilippe's Links:https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/https://www.crowdsec.net/https://twitter.com/philippe_humeauToday in Manufacturing Inside the biggest stories impacting U.S. manufacturing.Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify Dev InterruptedBehind every successful tech company is an engineering org. We tell their story.Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify Sales Bluebird for leaders and go-to-market teams at cyber security startupsTips, tricks, ideas and inspiration from legendary cyber security CEOs and CROsListen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify Ad To The BoneYour digital advertising, AdTech & programmatic advertising podcastListen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify Business Your WayWe talk strategies, systems & support needed to grow and scale a service-based business..Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the show
The Car Hacking Village continues to evolve, bringing new systems and simulators into the village for hackers to get their hands on. There are also some talks taking place on the village YouTube channel for those interested in research and other engaging conversations and presentations.About The Car Hacking VillageThe primary goal of the Car Hacking Village is to build a community around discovering weaknesses and exposing vulnerabilities that could significantly impact the safety and security of all drivers and passengers on the road today. Educating security researchers on the functionality of vehicle systems coupled with providing them with the opportunity to gain hands-on experience working side by side with experts in this field is a plus for the attendees. Leveraging the vast amount of experience the security research community brings to the Village may increase the safety and security of vehicles on the road today and for generations to come. Breaches of automotive systems have been in the forefront of the global media for more than a year. Wired and wireless exploitation of vehicle systems has become a critical safety concern for the automotive industry, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Congress, the Department of Homeland Security, and consumers. Car Hacking Village plays an important role for researchers interested in the safety and security of the more than one billion vehicles on the road worldwide. In 2015, over 16.5 million vehicles were sold in the United States. On average, motor vehicles are driven over 15,000 miles annually and consumers spend upwards of 730 hours per year in their cars.Be sure to catch all of our conversations from Black Hat and DEF CON 2022 at https://www.itspm.ag/bhdc22____________________________GuestJustinCar Hacking Village Lead [@CarHackVillage]____________________________This Episode's SponsorsCrowdSec | https://itspm.ag/crowdsec-b1vpEdgescan | https://itspm.ag/itspegwebPentera | https://itspm.ag/pentera-tyuw____________________________ResourcesCar Hacking Village website: https://www.carhackingvillage.com/Car Hacking Village Talks | https://www.carhackingvillage.com/talksAt DEF CON: https://forum.defcon.org/node/240928____________________________For more Black Hat and DEF CON Event Coverage podcast and video episodes visit: https://www.itspmagazine.com/black-hat-2022-and-def-con-hacker-summer-camp-las-vegas-usa-cybersecurity-event-and-conference-coverageAre you interested in telling your story in connection with Black Hat and DEF CON by sponsoring our coverage?
It's Hacker Summer Camp time! Thank you for joining this live stream during Black Hat and DEF CON with guests Andrea Mijuskovic and Philippe Humeau!Watch the live stream video on our Black Hat and DEF CON coverage page: https://www.itspm.ag/bhdc22Follow our social media as everything will be streamed live as it is. No editing, no script, and most of all … no BS
It's Hacker Summer Camp time! Thank you for joining this live stream during Black Hat and DEF CON with guests Andrea Mijuskovic and Philippe Humeau!Watch the live stream video on our Black Hat and DEF CON coverage page: https://www.itspm.ag/bhdc22Follow our social media as everything will be streamed live as it is. No editing, no script, and most of all … no BS
We take that little box that connects our home to the internet for granted. But in reality, it's often the only thing hiding our computers and vulnerable IoT devices from automated, remote attacks. This "internet background radiation" is ever present - a massive network of malicious or compromised devices, constantly scanning the internet for exposed and ill-protected systems. Today, we'll discuss routers, firewalls and other common aspects of home network security with the CEO of CrowdSec. He'll also explain how we can enable these devices to share information in a sort of global neighborhood watch program, distributing information about bad actors to better protect us all. Philippe Humeau graduated as an IT security engineer in 1999 in Cyber security. He then created his first company, dedicated to red team penetration testing and high-security hosting. After selling his first company, his eternal crushes for Cybersecurity led him to create CrowdSec in 2020. This open-source editor creates a participative IPS which generates a global, crowd-powered CTI. Further Info CrowdSec: https://crowdsec.net/ CrowdSec code repository: https://github.com/crowdsecurity/crowdsec Lulu reverse firewall: https://objective-see.org/products/lulu.html Donate directly with Monero! https://firewallsdontstopdragons.com/contact/ Amulet of Entropy!!:https://amuletofentropy.com/ Subscribe to the newsletter: https://firewallsdontstopdragons.com/newsletter/new-newsletter/Become a Patron! https://www.patreon.com/FirewallsDontStopDragons Would you like me to speak to your group about security and/privacy? http://bit.ly/Firewalls-SpeakerGenerate secure passphrases! https://d20key.com/#/ Table of Contents Use these timestamps to jump to a particular section of the show. 0:02:46: Update on Firefox Total Cookie Protection0:03:50: DEF CON coming soon0:04:47: Interview start0:06:49: What does a firewall do?0:10:18: Should I enable the firewall on my computer, too?0:14:18: What is Universal Plug and Play (uPnP?)0:16:04: What is Network Address Translation (NAT)?0:20:16: Hacker vs Cybercriminal?0:21:17: Internet Background Radiation0:26:19: Creating network silos0:29:28: Attacks from within0:32:15: Botnets and DDoS attacks0:35:37: What are the biggest network threats today?0:40:16: Who are the main threat actors?0:45:09: How does Crowdsec work?0:49:36: How quickly do agents share info?0:51:37: How does Crowdsec make money?0:53:03: Can you use Crowdsec on home routers?0:55:28: Are things getting better or worse?0:57:43: Top security tips?1:01:45: How do you poke a hole in a firewall?1:04:01: Setting up guest network1:07:48: Reverse firewalls1:09:07: Final word
Philippe Humeau joins us this hour to talk about CrowdSec - an IDS/IPS that uses crowd sourced information to evaluate threats on your network! -- During The Show -- 01:00 New Red Hat CEO Matt Hicks New Red Hat CEO (https://www.redhat.com/en/about/press-releases/red-hat-names-matt-hicks-president-and-chief-executive-officer) 03:44 Remove all traces of a user on logout? - Wayne TailsOS (https://tails.boum.org/) Noah's hackish solution TempFS? RamDisk? SquashFS? 'Delete' isn't a thing (Inodes) PhotoRec (https://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/PhotoRec) 09:30 Recommendations for hosting provider - Gary Gary's Site (https://www.shawanga.com/) Host Gator Self Host with Hugo Tied to Hosting provider 14:00 Listener responds about CAD on Linux - Heath FreeCAD (https://www.freecad.org/) LibreCAD (https://librecad.org/) TinkerCAD (https://www.tinkercad.com/) Run under Wine 15:30 More Info about Steve's Solar? - Ian Steve likes his EnPhase Solar (https://enphase.com/) setup Hacks Home Assistant Integration (https://github.com/briancmpbll/home_assistant_custom_envoy) 18:30 News Wire Linux Better on i9 Systems Ghacks (https://www.ghacks.net/2022/07/09/linux-is-performing-better-than-windows-11-according-to-this-benchmark-test/) UltimateXR XR Today (https://www.xrtoday.com/virtual-reality/ultimatexr-launches-free-open-source-unity-tool/) EMQX 5.0 EIN News (https://www.einnews.com/pr_news/580326713/emqx-5-0-released-the-ultra-scalable-open-source-mqtt-broker) Calibre 6.0 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/calibre-6-0-released-with-full-text-search-arm64-support-on-linux-qt-6-port) Budgie Desktop 10.6.2 Buddies of Budgie (https://blog.buddiesofbudgie.org/budgie-10-6-2-released/) Linux Mint 21 Beta 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/linux-mint-21-beta-is-now-available-for-download-heres-a-first-look) Debian GNU/Linux 11.4 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/debian-gnu-linux-11-4-bullseye-released-with-79-security-updates-and-81-bug-fixes) Kali Linux on Linode Help Net Security (https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/07/11/linode-kali-linux/) Paladin Cloud Security-as-Code Virtualization Review (https://virtualizationreview.com/articles/2022/07/11/paladin-cloud.aspx) Android Zero Day XDA Developers (https://www.xda-developers.com/pixel-6-galaxy-s22-linux-kernel-vulnerability-root-android/) OrBit Malware Cyper Security News (https://cybersecuritynews.com/orbit-undetected-linux-malware/) CrowdSec Interview Philippe Ew-Mow from CrowdSec (https://www.crowdsec.net/) What is CrowdSec How CrowdSec works Domains and Hashes vs IP Address and Behavior How IPs are cleaned Reporting based on "identity" not IP Address IDS and IPS CrowdSec Agent and CrowdSec Console Open Source Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) CrowdSec API How does CrowdSec resolve IDS and IPS problems? Blocking Unique Attacks The 3 Tiers of Crowdsec CrowdSec and GDPR Using Crowdsec Bouncers (IPS) CrowdSec Best Practices Replay Mode Integration into Firewalls CrowdSec on OPNSense (https://www.crowdsec.net/blog/crowdsec-arrives-on-opnsense) Best place to get started/learn CrowdSec Docs (doc.crowdsec.net) 49:00 Thoughts on CrowdSec Noah has been playing with CrowdSec Can also identify and block malicious out going traffic 51:00 Interview with Matt Hicks Interview with Matt Hicks (YouTube) (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWg5cRH9YQg) -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/294) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) Special Guest: Steve Ovens.
Philippe Humeau joins us this hour to talk about CrowdSec - an IDS/IPS that uses crowd sourced information to evaluate threats on your network!
NATO's response to Killnet's cyberattacks on Lithuania. Influence operations in the interest of national market share. SOHO routers are under attack. YTStealer is out and active in the wild. RansomHouse hits AMD. CISA releases six ICS security advisories. The most dangerous software weaknesses. Betsy Carmelite from Booz Allen Hamilton takes a look back at Biden's executive order on cyber. Our guest is Philippe Humeau of CrowdSec on taking a collaborative approach to security. And a guilty plea in the case of the NetWalker affiliate. For links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing: https://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/11/124 Selected reading. Could the Russian cyber attack on Lithuania draw a military response from NATO? (Sky News) Pro-PRC DRAGONBRIDGE Influence Campaign Targets Rare Earths Mining Companies in Attempt to Thwart Rivalry to PRC Market Dominance (Mandiant) ZuoRAT Hijacks SOHO Routers to Silently Stalk Networks (Lumen) New YTStealer Malware Aims to Hijack Accounts of YouTube Content Creators (Hacker News) RansomHouse Extortion Group Claims AMD as Latest Victim (RestorePrivacy) RansomHouse gang claims to have some stolen AMD data (Register) CISA releases 6 Industrial Control Systems Advisories (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency) 2022 CWE Top 25 Most Dangerous Software Weaknesses (CISA) Netwalker ransomware affiliate agrees to plead guilty to hacking charges (The Record by Recorded Future)
The venture market in cybersecurity continues to shift as the economy ebbs and flows throughout the world. However, when you have a good idea, it still gets the attention of the users and the investors, even if that means starting at the bottom and working your way up.Join us for a live stream conversation with CrowdSec CEO, Philippe Humeau, as we take a quick look back at what we experienced during RSA Conference and spend some time talking through what is coming up for the 10-person contingent from CrowdSec that is making the journey to Las Vegas, arriving from multiple countries, to bring their insights, expertise, and conversations to the Arsenal, vendor halls, speaking stages, and meeting rooms during Black Hat and DEF CON.This is a quick chat packed with a lot of energy, vision, and enthusiasm — tempered with a dose of reality and humility.It's about embracing "precious" without being "precious" — have a listen.Note: This story contains promotional content. Learn more.GuestPhilippe HumeauCEO at CrowdSec [@Crowd_Security]On Linkedin | https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/On Twitter | https://twitter.com/philippe_humeau____________________________Be sure to visit CrowdSec at https://itspm.ag/crowdsec-b1vp to learn more about their offering.On Linkedin
The venture market in cybersecurity continues to shift as the economy ebbs and flows throughout the world. However, when you have a good idea, it still gets the attention of the users and the investors, even if that means starting at the bottom and working your way up.Join us for a live stream conversation with CrowdSec CEO, Philippe Humeau, as we take a quick look back at what we experienced during RSA Conference and spend some time talking through what is coming up for the 10-person contingent from CrowdSec that is making the journey to Las Vegas, arriving from multiple countries, to bring their insights, expertise, and conversations to the Arsenal, vendor halls, speaking stages, and meeting rooms during Black Hat and DEF CON.This is a quick chat packed with a lot of energy, vision, and enthusiasm — tempered with a dose of reality and humility.It's about embracing "precious" without being "precious" — have a listen.Note: This story contains promotional content. Learn more.GuestPhilippe HumeauCEO at CrowdSec [@Crowd_Security]On Linkedin | https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/On Twitter | https://twitter.com/philippe_humeau____________________________Be sure to visit CrowdSec at https://itspm.ag/crowdsec-b1vp to learn more about their offering.On Linkedin
Philippe Humeau founded CrowdSec in 2020, where they got to work on their open-source massively multi-player firewall which utilises IP behaviour AND reputation to help tackle mass scale hacking. Listen in as he talks about the benefits of actual collaboration, the human side of security and some brilliant stories. To find out more about CrowdSec or to up Philippe on his kind offer to open the data up to academics, click the link here to visit the site. To follow Philippe on LinkedIn, click this link here. To follow Philippe on Twitter, click here for his profile. To get in touch try the contact page of the Human Factor Security website or follow me on Twitter, where I can be found at @Jenny_Radcliffe Note: music for the show was provided by; Spinnin' by Alex (c) copyright 2011 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/AlexBeroza/32423 Ft: spinningmerkaba
Graduated in 1999 from Epita (France) as IT security engineer, Philippe endorsed many roles before creating its latest company CrowdSec. From Pentester to community builder (Magento) or even eCommerce expert (author of 4 books), or CTO, he is tech curious and loves to dive into new trends like IoT, crypto currencies or AI. But whatever the context is, his crush is and will forever be IT security, SecOps and entrepreneurship. LP or investor in several different companies, CrowdSec is not its full time obsession.CrowdSec is an open-source and participative IPS able to analyze visitor behavior & provide an adapted response to all kinds of attacks. It also leverages the crowd power to generate a global CTI database to protect the user network.For more SecTools podcast episodes, visit https://infoseccampus.com
GRC is comprised of the ethical management of an organization combined with the organization's ability to identify, quantify, and manage risk, along with the ability to demonstrate compliance for these things in connection with internal, industry, and regulatory standards, frameworks, and requirements. If defined, implemented, and managed correctly, the organization should be in a strong position to withstand operational challenges and threats they face driven by forces such as market dynamics, competitive landscape, employee behavior, breaks in the supply chain, and exposure to cyberattacks.Join us for this conversation where we will discuss:◾️ What is the current definition of GRC◾️ What are the objectives of GRC plan◾️ What components make up a GRC plan◾️ Who owns the plan, who are the key stakeholders◾️ How does a GRC plan get defined and implemented◾️ What outcomes can a company expect to achieve◾️ How does an organization define and measure success with their GRC plan____________________________GuestKouadjo BiniInformation Security Officer of American State Bank and Trust and Founder Infosec TattleOn LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/kentia-bini/On LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/company/infosectattleOn Twitter | https://twitter.com/infosec_tattle____________________________This Episode's SponsorsImperva: https://itspm.ag/imperva277117988HITRUST: https://itspm.ag/itsphitweb____________________________ResourcesAssessing cyber risk in M&A: https://www.ibm.com/downloads/cas/RJX5MXJDNIST risk management framework: https://csrc.nist.gov/projects/risk-management/about-rmf____________________________Catch the on-demand live stream video and podcast here: https://www.itspmagazine.com/live-panels/governance-risk-and-compliance-protecting-the-business-with-policies-controls-and-audits-redefining-cybersecurity-with-sean-martinTo see and hear more Redefining Security content on ITSPmagazine, visit:https://www.itspmagazine.com/redefining-cybersecurityAre you interested in sponsoring an ITSPmagazine Channel?
How can an industry have so much data and information yet still lack the knowledge necessary to make quick, meaningful, impactful decisions? There could be many reasons, but one is no longer a missing intelligence-sharing platform.In this second chapter of our conversation with CrowdSec CEO, Philippe Humeau, we invite The Hacker Maker, Phillip Wylie, to bring his penetration testing experience and insights. Together we explore the value of investing in the cybersecurity community information sharing platform as a way to do way more than protect your organization. By doing so, we can help secure other businesses and whole communities in the neighbors around you, such as a local hospital that could experience an attack that you've already seen on your network.The value of investing in the security knowledge sharing economy directly impacts IT operations, security operations, businesses, society, and, therefore, humanity.Join us for a philosophical yet fun, thought-provoking conversation that will likely prompt you to not only share this podcast with your friends, colleagues, and peers but also start sharing your cybersecurity insights with your digital neighbors through the power of the CrowdSec platform.Note: This story contains promotional content. Learn more.GuestsPhilippe HumeauCEO at CrowdSec [@Crowd_Security]On Linkedin | https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/On Twitter | https://twitter.com/philippe_humeauPhillip WylieOn ITSPmagazine
How can an industry have so much data and information yet still lack the knowledge necessary to make quick, meaningful, impactful decisions? There could be many reasons, but one is no longer a missing intelligence-sharing platform.In this second chapter of our conversation with CrowdSec CEO, Philippe Humeau, we invite The Hacker Maker, Phillip Wylie, to bring his penetration testing experience and insights. Together we explore the value of investing in the cybersecurity community information sharing platform as a way to do way more than protect your organization. By doing so, we can help secure other businesses and whole communities in the neighbors around you, such as a local hospital that could experience an attack that you've already seen on your network.The value of investing in the security knowledge sharing economy directly impacts IT operations, security operations, businesses, society, and, therefore, humanity.Join us for a philosophical yet fun, thought-provoking conversation that will likely prompt you to not only share this podcast with your friends, colleagues, and peers but also start sharing your cybersecurity insights with your digital neighbors through the power of the CrowdSec platform.Note: This story contains promotional content. Learn more.GuestsPhilippe HumeauCEO at CrowdSec [@Crowd_Security]On Linkedin | https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/On Twitter | https://twitter.com/philippe_humeauPhillip WylieOn ITSPmagazine
Philippe Humeau, Founder of CrowdSec discusses some of the biggest issues currently facing cybersecurity and how open-source cybersecurity platforms combat them.
Today, we will be talking with our good friend, Philippe Humeau. Philippe is the Founder of CrowdSec, an open-source multiplayer firewall that is able to analyze visitor behavior & provide an adapted response to all kinds of attacks. It leverages crowd power to generate a global IP reputation database to protect the user network. LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/in/PhilippeHumeau. At Tech & Main, we want to be YOUR technology partner. Let our 20+ years of expertise help you achieve the outcomes that are best for your business: cybersecurity, cloud, SD-WAN and data center. We have engineers and project managers available to assist you. Call our office at 678-575-8515, email us at info@techandmain.com or visit us at www.techandmain.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/techandmain/message
Botnets are on of the biggest threats from the internet. We are talking with cybersecurity expert Philippe Humeau about botnets, cover their capabilities and how botnets are controlled.Host of this episode:Tyler Cohen Wood & Mirko RossAbout our guest:Philippe Humeau graduated in 1999 as IT security engineer from EPITA (Paris, France). He founded his first company at the same time and quickly oriented it towards penetration testing and high-security hosting. He was also deeply involved in Magento's community creation & animation in France and versed in eCommerce (wrote 4 books on the topic). In 2020, he founded CrowdSec, a company editing an eponymous open-source and collaborative IPS, leveraging both IP behavior & reputation to create a community and tackle the mass scale hacking problem. His crushes will forever be IT security, DevSecOps, and entrepreneurship.Shownotes:Mirai botnet authors avoid jail time: https://krebsonsecurity.com/2018/09/mirai-botnet-authors-avoid-jail-time/CrowdSec website: https://crowdsec.net/CrowdSec GitHub: https://github.com/crowdsecurity/crowdsecCrowdSec explained in 15 minutes by Philippe ➜ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d9NgZBldnos See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Prologue This week, the guy with the best vendor hoodies ever is back! Philippe Humeau of Crowdsec joins us again to talk about some of the data his team have gathered, analyzed, and are using to crowd-source protection in the form of block lists. Anton Chuvakin joins us to bring his useful manner of snarkasm, just to keep us honest. Guests Philippe Humeau LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/ Anton Chuvakin LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuvakin/
Philippe talks about the background and inspiration for CrowdSec. His desire to not be an employee spurred him on his journey. The idea of crowd sourcing, collaborate IPS, found the most aggressive IP's and blocked them to create more security. Open source and collaborate efforts can negate criminality. They run mostly on Linux, but expanding to Windows. The more machines on the network, the better it can work. As they grow the sky is the limit. They could even block the threats at their routers. Then Philippe shares his other passion, Pinball! Connect with Philippe: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/. Visit CrowdSec: https://crowdsec.net/ Visit CrowdSec's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKhMjrV_Y2ws3gTW-SsxFkA Visit Short Arms website: https://www.shortarmsolutions.com/ You can follow us at: Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/company/shortarmsolutions YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjUNoFuy6d1rouj_SBg3Qkw/featured Twitter: https://twitter.com/ShortArmSAS
Philippe talks about the background and inspiration for CrowdSec. His desire to not be an employee spurred him on his journey. The idea of crowd sourcing, collaborate IPS, found the most aggressive IP's and blocked them to create more security. Open source and collaborate efforts can negate criminality. They run mostly on Linux, but expanding to Windows. The more machines on the network, the better it can work. As they grow the sky is the limit. They could even block the threats at their routers. Then Philippe shares his other passion, Pinball! Connect with Philippe: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/. Visit CrowdSec: https://crowdsec.net/ Visit CrowdSec's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKhMjrV_Y2ws3gTW-SsxFkA Visit Short Arms website: https://www.shortarmsolutions.com/ You can follow us at: Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/company/shortarmsolutions YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjUNoFuy6d1rouj_SBg3Qkw/featured Twitter: https://twitter.com/ShortArmSAS
Philippe: - Founder and CEO of CrowdSec, the "Waze of Security" - 5-time entrepreneur - Entered cybersecurity after meeting his childhood hero who hacked video games Listen to the episode for the full story behind his introduction to the field, the factors that make a business idea feasible, and how crowdsourced cybersecurity can revolutionize the industry. https://crowdsec.net
In this interview we spoke with Philippe Humeau, the Founder and CEO of CrowdSec, an open-source multiplayer firewall that is able to analyze visitor behavior & provide an adapted response to all kinds of attacks. We discussed the following topics: The biggest issues currently facing cybersecurity and how open-source cybersecurity platforms combat them; Why multiplayer firewalls can help limit zero-day attacks and minimise cyberware from attempting to ‘divide and conquer' businesses; Why does Philippe believe malevolent IP attacks are growing in size and how can the everyday user themselves protect their data? How most companies and individuals end up getting hacked during their lifetime, and how to avoid that from happening? and more... Let us know what you think about this and other interviews. If you want to be our guest, or you know some one who would be a great guest on our show, just send your email to info@globalriskconsult.com with a subject line "Global Risk Community Show" and give a brief explanation of what topic you would like to to talk about and we will be in touch with you asap.
Today's guest is Philippe Humeau, CEO of CrowdSec. In this episode, Philippe discusses CrowdSec and his role there, the advantages of open source, how they make their business model work, how pentesting and the security landscape have changed over the past few decades, how the open source movement is affecting society at large, the implications of gray zone war, how traditional powers should respond to cyber attacks, how he got his start in security, what keeps him up at night, and as always, his toughest lesson learned.
Philippe Humeau is the Founder of CrowdSec, an open-source multiplayer firewall that can analyze visitor behavior & provide an adapted response to all kinds of attacks. In addition, it leverages crowd power to generate a global IP reputation database to protect the user network. Today, users come from 110+ countries, approximately block 700,000+ malevolent IPs by quarter, and the company also raised $5M in funding! Phillipe has also received an MBA in Computer Sciences from EPITA, created five start-ups, and seeded 10 of them. Philippe joins me on Tech Talks Daily to discuss the biggest issues currently facing cybersecurity and how open-source cybersecurity platforms combat them. We discuss why multiplayer firewalls can help limit zero-day attacks and minimize cyberware from attempting to ‘divide and conquer' businesses. Philippe also shares how malevolent IP attacks are growing and how everyday users equip themselves to protect their data.
Philippe Humeau Philippe Humeau is the Founder of CrowdSec, a free, modern & collaborative behavior detection engine, coupled with a global IP reputation network. LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philippehumeau/ Notes: https://crowdsec.net/ https://github.com/crowdsecurity/crowdsec Credits: Music by ikson: https://www.iksonmusic.com Special Guest: Philippe Humeau.
urity. CrowdSec aims to prevent intrusions and other forms of malicious activity, but it does it in a different way - it utilizes intelligence gathered from other users in order to enhance its protection. In this episode, Jay and Joao discuss CrowdSec with Philippe Humeau, the CEO of the project.
Jean Rondeau et Julian Sykes, avec la participation de Philippe Humeau. « Sachez ne pas me savoir » écrit Jean Rondeau dans le livret de son dernier album Melancholy Grace, donnant la parole à la Musique qui, pourtant, comme il le décrit, ne se lie peut-être à notre vocable que par le biais du silence. Il s'agira ici de tourner autour de différents thèmes tels que l'interprétation, le rapport au texte musical, le mystère musical, le concert et ses codes, les différents gestes musicaux, le mouvement, la pédagogie et, si le temps nous le permet, bien d'autres sujets encore, le tout sous la forme d'un échange improvisé. Jean Rondeau nous dit que la musique n'est pas son moyen d'expression, mais bien l'expression de la musique elle-même. Il reste très attaché au verbe et à l'échange avec son public. Cette conversation permettra un autre contact, qu'il affectionne, et qui complétera le portrait de cette saison musicale qui s'annonce, on l'espère, joyeuse ! Enregistrée au Club 44 le 10 novembre 2021
Colin Bell, Rob Cuddy and Kris Duer from HCL Software bring you another application security interview special. In this Episode the team discuss the recent 'Rug Pull' with a fake Squid Game Crypto Currency and they also talk to Philippe Humeau the founder of CrowdSec.Phillippe is a true Entrepreneur and CrowdSec is his latest startup founded in 2020. It is a company editing an eponymous open-source massively multiplayer firewall, leveraging both IP behaviour & reputation to create a community and tackle the mass scale hacking problem. Find out more about CrowdSec here.... https://crowdsec.net/
Philippe Humeau, CEO of CrowdSec talks about the advantages of open source security solutions to protect against zero-day and IP attacks. CrowdSec is an open-source multiplayer firewall that is able to analyze visitor behavior and provide and adapted response to a wide variety of attacks. https://crowdsec.net/ www.securetalkpodcast.com
Philippe Humeau graduated in 1999 as an IT security engineer from EPITA (Paris, France). He founded his first company right after school and dedicated it to red team penetration testing and high security hosting. He was also deeply involved in Magento's community creation & animation in France and versed in eCommerce (wrote four books on the topic). After selling his previous company (NBS System), his eternal crushes for Cybersecurity and entrepreneurship led him to create a new company in 2020. CrowdSec was born, an open-source software editor behind the eponymous massively multiplayer firewall, leveraging both IP behavior & reputation to create a community and tackle the mass scale hacking problem.
Suppose you still believe the narrative of a hooded figure with ski gloves and a crowbar attacking a company network. In that case, this may be hard to digest: Cybercrime is a business. Cybercriminals are well organized.They share data; sell information; rent, lease, and trade tools; and market their business.It's time to source the crowd of cyber defenders to counter this advantage.Many organizations are spending millions, if not billions, of dollars standing up multi-layered endpoint, network, and perimeter protection systems, multi-layered cloud security solutions, and privilege-oriented identity management systems, as well as real-time security operations centers - and much, much more.And let's not forget that the security team needs to do all of this while allowing the users to get their job done and, in the best-case scenario, not having to worry about any of this. The Cybercriminal environment doesn't have to worry about this — actually, they will try to take advantage of it. All their investments go straight into understanding their target. What technology is used to run the business, what are their weaknesses, and how can they get in and out with as much value as possible without the possibility of being caught. Cybercriminals use threat intelligence to attack. This is what they can focus on, and they use it to their advantage, each and every day.CrowdSec is joining the good guys on this battlefield and understands that by acting together and sharing important, relevant pieces of information, we can successfully counteract organized cybercrime. CrowdSec's CTI-driven IPS objective is to automate cybersecurity threat intelligence sharing and consumption on a large scale.How does that happen?Through the crowd, of course.What makes it work beyond scale?It's all about the real-world context that the crowd experiences and shares.There are plenty of data lakes, and CTI feeds available to determine the state of an IP address; has it been seen as malicious or not?That's only part of the question.How relevant are these data sets to your business? To your environment? To your risk level? Can you ingest them, make sense of them, take action from them?Once these and many other questions are answered, captured, shared, and utilized at scale by the crowd, we can effectively become competitive against cybercrime.Learn more about what it means to join the crowd and how all the information can benefit businesses and organizations all over the globe.This is the value of authentic and accurate information sharing.Note: This story contains promotional content. Learn more.____________________________GuestPhilippe HumeauOn Linkedin
This is a series where we emulate a first-time business lunch with a vendor/entrepreneur, where you can hear the pitch and ask all your basic questions about the offering. What you hear is exactly the type of conversation I would have with someone in real life during a 30 minute lunch chat where I'm hearing about the solution for the first time. Support the show: https://danielmiessler.com/support/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
"Elève pendant plus de 10 ans de la regrettée Blandine Verlet, Jean Rondeau a donné au clavecin une exposition majeure, grâce à son talent musical, sa passion et son indépendance d'esprit. Avec Melancholy Grace, son nouvel album, le claveciniste nous propose un voyage poétique et mélancolique en compagnie des grands compositeurs italiens, anglais, allemands et hollandais du 16e et 17e siècles (Frescobaldi, Bull...). Jean Rondeau a enregistré ce superbe programme sur deux instruments : un grand clavecin de type italien réalisé par Philippe Humeau en 2007, d'après un modèle anonyme du début du 18e siècle et un arpicordo ou virginal, originaire de Florence, réalisé vers 1575 par un facteur inconnu, que l'on supposerait être Francesco Poggi."
"Elève pendant plus de 10 ans de la regrettée Blandine Verlet, Jean Rondeau a donné au clavecin une exposition majeure, grâce à son talent musical, sa passion et son indépendance d'esprit. Avec Melancholy Grace, son nouvel album, le claveciniste nous propose un voyage poétique et mélancolique en compagnie des grands compositeurs italiens, anglais, allemands et hollandais du 16e et 17e siècles (Frescobaldi, Bull...). Jean Rondeau a enregistré ce superbe programme sur deux instruments : un grand clavecin de type italien réalisé par Philippe Humeau en 2007, d'après un modèle anonyme du début du 18e siècle et un arpicordo ou virginal, originaire de Florence, réalisé vers 1575 par un facteur inconnu, que l'on supposerait être Francesco Poggi."
Philippe Humeau graduated in 1999 as IT security engineer from EPITA (Paris, France). He founded his first company right after school and dedicated it to red team penetration testing and high security hosting. He was also deeply involved in Magento's community creation & animation in France and versed into eCommerce (wrote 4 books on the topic). After selling this first company (NBS System), his eternal crushes for Cyber security and entrepreneurship led him to create a new company in 2020. CrowdSec was born, an open-source software editor behind the eponymous massively multiplayer firewall, leveraging both IP behavior & reputation to create a community and tackle the mass scale hacking problem. Real-world hacking learning experiences. Hacking is about the size of 4th or 5th largest country's GDP. Hacking is organized, industrialized, and professional. Wardriving - cruise through neighborhoods looking for open or weak wifi signals and being untraceable. Education is key in security. [[cybertraps heather stratford]] Red Team penetration - hacking into places with permission to validate security. SQL Injection to the search bar on TV! CrowdSec - big companies are trying to defend themselves with lots of money, and they are failing. A super soldier is not the answer. If you want to take on an army, you have have a bigger army. One vulnerability - hackers don't like getting woken up by FBI. Behavior logs says what happened. How does a normal consumer get involved. Exposed IPs (IPs that people use for ) need to be protected. Poisoning the network by sending bad information. Gaining trust. Whitelist Automation Goal is to cripple the hacking community. We gave up on human validation. One IP is scanned 1000 times per day. Most hackers are used to people protecting them. Consumers: use a linux box to filter internet. Use privacy tools to keep their information private. Tools that allow you to decline cookies automatically. DNS that protects privacy Cloudflare 111 app. VPN - multi-factor authentication Update your devices. WPS - deactivate that. password ideas - 3 levels Garbage: music_tuning for tuning Middle Level: mozart&&NameofSite High security level: 20 characters with characters and phrases 1/ Hacking, globally, where do we stand? 2/ Why do you think collaborative security is key to solving the mass hacking problem? 3/ Why is Hacking, a 30 year old problem, not solved? 4/ Is there a risk that someone can break this kind of reputation system? 5/ How to deal with IPV4 NAT addresses? 6/ What technologies are CrowdSec already compatible with? 7/ IP reputation had a dubious reputation in the past, why will it succeed now? 8/ Why is Open source so obvious for cybersecurity space up to you?
Hey friends! Today we're talking with Philippe Humeau, CEO of CrowdSec, which is "an open-source massively multiplayer firewall able to analyze visitor behavior & provide an adapted response to all kinds of attacks. It also leverages the crowd power to generate a global IP reputation database to protect the user network." I came into this interview not knowing much at all about CrowdSec, so I peppered Philippe with questions such as: What is CrowdSec? What problem does it solve? Who are your competitors? You're open source...so how do you make $? What's your five-year plan? You're dealing with a lot of data and metrics...how are you handling data privacy laws and concerns such as GDPR? What if I fall in love with CrowdSec and want to contribute to making it better? It was a really fun, transparent and energetic interview - hope you enjoy it!
Philippe Humeau, fondateur et président de CrowdSec, était l'invité de Christophe Jakubyszyn dans Good Morning Business, ce mercredi 5 mai. Ils sont revenus sur les échanges d'informations avec les utilisateurs pour voir où se passe les attaques informatiques, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission dulundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Ce mercredi 5 mai Sandra Gandoin et Christophe Jakubyszyn ont reçu François Villeroy de Galhau, gouverneur de la Banque de France, Eric Baissus, président du directoire de Kalray, Lionel Aré, directeur associé senior au Boston Consulting Group, et Philippe Humeau, fondateur et président de CrowdSec, dans l'émission Good Morning Business sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.