#hardwareSecurity

2026-01-31

OMB has issued new guidance adopting a risk-based approach to federal software and hardware security, rescinding prior mandates under M-22-18 and M-23-16.

Agencies must retain complete inventories but may now choose whether to require secure development attestations and SBOMs. The scope also expands to explicitly include hardware supply chain risk.

How does this affect assurance and third-party risk management?

Source: whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uplo

Follow TechNadu for factual policy reporting.

#InfoSec #CyberPolicy #SupplyChainRisk #SBOM #HardwareSecurity #TechNadu

OMB Scraps Prior Software Supply Chain Rules in Push for Risk-Based Security
2026-01-02

Understanding that it's probably nowhere close to as good as the #GoogleTensor chip or #SamsungKnox, has anyone done an analysis of the #HardwareSecurity of the @jolla phone line?

#security #MobileSecurity #JollaPhone #SailfishOS

Leanpubleanpub
2025-12-29

NEW! A Leanpub Podcast Interview with Sal Kimmich, Author of Code, Chips and Control: The Security Posture of Digital Isolation

Watch here: youtu.be/kfeJVv7boNs

What Is a Supply Chain Attack? Lessons from Recent Incidents

924 words, 5 minutes read time.

I’ve been in computer programming with a vested interest in Cybersecurity long enough to know that your most dangerous threats rarely come through the obvious channels. It’s not always a hacker pounding at your firewall or a phishing email landing in an inbox. Sometimes, the breach comes quietly through the vendors, service providers, and software updates you rely on every day. That’s the harsh reality of supply chain attacks. These incidents exploit trust, infiltrating organizations by targeting upstream partners or seemingly benign components. They’re not theoretical—they’re real, costly, and increasingly sophisticated. In this article, I’m going to break down what supply chain attacks are, examine lessons from high-profile incidents, and share actionable insights for SOC analysts, CISOs, and anyone responsible for protecting enterprise assets.

Understanding Supply Chain Attacks: How Trusted Vendors Can Be Threat Vectors

A supply chain attack occurs when a threat actor compromises an organization through a third party, whether that’s a software vendor, cloud provider, managed service provider, or even a hardware supplier. The key distinction from conventional attacks is that the adversary leverages trust relationships. Your defenses often treat trusted partners as safe zones, which makes these attacks particularly insidious. The infamous SolarWinds breach in 2020 is a perfect example. Hackers injected malicious code into an update of the Orion platform, and thousands of organizations unknowingly installed the compromised software. From the perspective of a SOC analyst, it’s a nightmare scenario: alerts may look normal, endpoints behave according to expectation, and yet an attacker has already bypassed perimeter defenses. Supply chain compromises come in many forms: software updates carrying hidden malware, tampered firmware or hardware, and cloud or SaaS services used as stepping stones for broader attacks. The lesson here is brutal but simple: every external dependency is a potential attack vector, and assuming trust without verification is a vulnerability in itself.

Lessons from Real-World Supply Chain Attacks

History has provided some of the most instructive lessons in this area, and the pain was often widespread. The NotPetya attack in 2017 masqueraded as a routine software update for a Ukrainian accounting package but quickly spread globally, leaving a trail of destruction across multiple sectors. It was not a random incident—it was a strategic strike exploiting the implicit trust organizations placed in a single provider. Then came Kaseya in 2021, where attackers leveraged a managed service provider to distribute ransomware to hundreds of businesses in a single stroke. The compromise of one MSP cascaded through client systems, illustrating that upstream vulnerabilities can multiply downstream consequences exponentially. Even smaller incidents, such as a compromised open-source library or a misconfigured cloud service, can serve as a launchpad for attackers. What these incidents have in common is efficiency, stealth, and scale. Attackers increasingly prefer the supply chain route because it requires fewer direct compromises while yielding enormous operational impact. For anyone working in a SOC, these cases underscore the need to monitor not just your environment but the upstream components that support it, as blind trust can be fatal.

Mitigating Supply Chain Risk: Visibility, Zero Trust, and Preparedness

Mitigating supply chain risk requires a proactive, multifaceted approach. The first step is visibility—knowing exactly what software, services, and hardware your organization depends on. You cannot defend what you cannot see. Mapping these dependencies allows you to understand which systems are critical and which could serve as entry points for attackers. Second, you need to enforce Zero Trust principles. Even trusted vendors should have segmented access and stringent authentication. Multi-factor authentication, network segmentation, and least-privilege policies reduce the potential blast radius if a compromise occurs. Threat hunting also becomes crucial, as anomalies from trusted sources are often the first signs of a breach. Beyond technical controls, preparation is equally important. Tabletop exercises, updated incident response plans, and comprehensive logging equip teams to react swiftly when compromise is detected. For CISOs, it also means communicating supply chain risk clearly to executives and boards. Stakeholders must understand that absolute prevention is impossible, and resilience—rapid detection, containment, and recovery—is the only realistic safeguard.

The Strategic Imperative: Assume Breach and Build Resilience

The reality of supply chain attacks is unavoidable: organizations are connected in complex webs, and attackers exploit these dependencies with increasing sophistication. The lessons are clear: maintain visibility over your entire ecosystem, enforce Zero Trust rigorously, hunt for subtle anomalies, and prepare incident response plans that include upstream components. These attacks are not hypothetical scenarios—they are the evolving face of cybersecurity threats, capable of causing widespread disruption. Supply chain security is not a checkbox or a one-time audit; it is a mindset that prioritizes vigilance, resilience, and strategic thinking. By assuming breach, questioning trust, and actively monitoring both internal and upstream environments, security teams can turn potential vulnerabilities into manageable risks. The stakes are high, but so are the rewards for those who approach supply chain security with discipline, foresight, and a relentless commitment to defense.

Call to Action

If this breakdown helped you think a little clearer about the threats out there, don’t just click away. Subscribe for more no-nonsense security insights, drop a comment with your thoughts or questions, or reach out if there’s a topic you want me to tackle next. Stay sharp out there.

D. Bryan King

Sources

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

#anomalyDetection #attackVector #breachDetection #breachResponse #CISO #cloudSecurity #cyberattackLessons #cybersecurity #cybersecurityGovernance #cybersecurityIncident #cybersecurityMindset #cybersecurityPreparedness #cybersecurityResilience #cybersecurityStrategy #EndpointSecurity #enterpriseRiskManagement #enterpriseSecurity #hardwareCompromise #hardwareSecurity #incidentResponse #incidentResponsePlan #ITRiskManagement #ITSecurityPosture #ITSecurityStrategy #Kaseya #maliciousUpdate #MFASecurity #MSPSecurity #networkSegmentation #NotPetya #organizationalSecurity #perimeterBypass #ransomware #riskAssessment #SaaSRisk #securityAudit #securityControls #SOCAnalyst #SOCBestPractices #SOCOperations #softwareSecurity #softwareSupplyChain #softwareUpdateThreat #SolarWinds #supplyChainAttack #supplyChainMitigation #supplyChainRisk #supplyChainSecurityFramework #supplyChainVulnerabilities #thirdPartyCompromise #threatHunting #threatLandscape #trustedVendorAttack #upstreamCompromise #upstreamMonitoring #vendorDependency #vendorRiskManagement #vendorSecurity #vendorTrust #zeroTrust

Illustration of a digital network under attack, highlighting compromised vendors and software updates, titled “What Is a Supply Chain Attack? Lessons from Recent Incidents.”
Leanpubleanpub
2025-12-11

Leanpub Book LAUNCH 🚀 Code, Chips and Control: The Security Posture of Digital Isolation by Sal Kimmich

Through the lens of the top 100 hacks since 1985, learn cybersecurity through real-world examples of what went wrong to convince us of “best practices".

Watch on our blog here:

leanpub.com/blog/leanpub-book-

Leanpubleanpub
2025-12-11

In this episode of the Leanpub Podcast, Sal Kimmich offers a deep technical look at the evolving security landscape across hardware, software, and open-source ecosystems.

Watch & read on our blog here:

leanpub.com/blog/the-leanpub-p

Leanpubleanpub
2025-12-11

NEW! A Leanpub Podcast Interview with Sal Kimmich, Author of Code, Chips and Control: The Security Posture of Digital Isolation

Watch here: youtu.be/kfeJVv7boNs

Ari Blockstorysamurai
2025-11-30

Why are criminals now offering customer support for phishing attacks? 😈📞 I discussed with Erik Hosler the new cat-and-mouse game in cybersecurity and how his company's hardware-level solution provides unbreakable foundation security.

NERDS.xyz – Real Tech News for Real Nerdsnerds.xyz@web.brid.gy
2025-11-20

TEAMGROUP T-CREATE EXPERT P35S Destroyed External SSD puts self-destruct storage into the hands of everyday users

fed.brid.gy/r/https://nerds.xy

2025-11-14

Your network may be locked down — but what about the circuitry inside the devices you trust?

Join Sherri Davidoff and Matt Durrin next Wednesday, November 19th for a Cyberside Chats: Live! that explores how subtle hardware design choices and opaque sourcing can introduce risk long before a device ever reaches your environment. You’ll also learn the steps your team can take to spot the red flags.

Register here: lmgsecurity.com/event/cybersid

#Cybersecurity #SupplyChainSecurity #ThirdPartyRiskManagement #HardwareSecurity #FirmwareRisk #EnterpriseSecurity #CyberRisk #Podcast

BiyteLümbiytelum
2025-11-03

Every modern system carries a tiny vault called a TPM—Trusted Platform Module.
It protects encryption keys and validates your system at boot.
TPM is now required for Windows 11, making firmware vigilance more critical than ever.
Even trusted hardware needs updates.
Trust, but patch.

BiyteLümbiytelum
2025-11-02

Firmware is low-level code that powers everything from routers to laptops.
It’s invisible, vital—and often ignored.
Unpatched firmware can expose known vulnerabilities for years.
✅ Check vendor updates
✅ Enable secure boot
✅ Replace hardware with signed firmware support
Security starts below the OS.

School of Computer Sciencesicepfl@social.epfl.ch
2025-10-24

💡 On EDIC: “I was challenged daily by top peers & great mentorship, building skills I use every day.”

Want to take your research from ideas to real-world innovation?
➡️ Discover the EDIC PhD Program

#EDICPhD #ComputerArchitecture #IntegratedSystems #HardwareSecurity #FutureResearchers #phdchat #academictwitter #WomenInSTEM

2025-10-07

🚨 Threat Alert: WireTap Attack on Intel SGX Servers

Physical attacks can now compromise SGX enclaves using a low-cost DIY setup (<$1,000). Attackers can extract cryptographic keys, forge enclaves, and threaten blockchain/Web3 networks and confidential computation.

Mitigation considerations:
🛡 Restrict physical server access
🔑 Review SGX-dependent systems in blockchain & Web3
💡 Monitor for suspicious DRAM bus activity

#WireTap #IntelSGX #HardwareSecurity #CyberSecurity #SideChannelAttack #BlockchainSecurity #Web3 #ServerSecurity #Infosec

New malware leverages WhatsApp to target Brazilian government and businesses
2025-10-07

Researchers uncovered a new wiretap-style attack targeting Intel SGX — exposing data once thought secure. Even trusted enclaves can leak secrets. 🔍💻 #HardwareSecurity #DataLeakage

thehackernews.com/2025/10/new-

BiyteLümbiytelum
2025-10-06

🖥️ Data doesn’t vanish when you hit delete.

Proper hardware disposal is a compliance act—GDPR & ISO 27001 both demand secure data destruction.

That means:
• Cryptographic wipes
• Degaussing or shredding
• Verified certificates of destruction

Compliance isn’t digital-only.

Client Info

Server: https://mastodon.social
Version: 2025.07
Repository: https://github.com/cyevgeniy/lmst