Cirrus Communications had half of its network taken down by attack earlier this week.
Chinese Hackers Use APTs to Target Gaming Companies
TG-3279 group wants to play games for free or re-use source code in competing products, says Dell
Cloud Security Alliance Develops Assessment Spec for Third Parties
The STAR Attestation is aimed at CPA assessments.
DDoS-ers Launch Attacks From Amazon EC2
Cybercriminals exploit vulnerability in Elasticsearch software to infiltrate cloud instances.
Nation-E Readies Cybersecurity Center for Critical Infrastructure
The focus will be on training and disaster preparedness.
BMWs and Bicycles: The Value of Complexity
If your ideas about Oracle Identity & Access solutions start and end with the word complexity, you’re missing the big picture. Contrary to what competitors might be telling you, Oracle’s current IAM solution looks nothing like a conglomeration of d…
Bugcrowd Launches Open-source Disclosure Framework
The move is meant to encourage responsible vulnerability disclosure practices.
UK Drops Charges Against US Hacking Suspect Love
British man released from bail but another US indictment is filed as extradition pressure mounts.
C-Level Execs Concerned About Cybersecurity, But Not Investing in It
Time, interest and funding are all lacking despite the reputation hazards of a data breach.
WordPress Security: Securing Sites From Hackers / Future Attacks
As WordPress is the most popular CMS available on the web but also vulnerable to threats if we don’t follow the necessary security measures.
In one of previous guest post, Sarah Rexman mentioned some tips about securing WordPress and in this post I’m gonna share my own experience. While working as freelancer on Upwork, PeoplePerHour and Freelancer; clients always have issues about securing their sites from hackers and ask about how to prevent from future attacks. So consider these points to secure your WordPress site for now and future:
- Keep your WordPress up to date. Latest stable version is 6.7.2 released on 11th February, 2025.
- Keep your all plugins, themes up to date.
- Always keep backup of your database, files and make it update after some interval.
- If site has been compromised, then you must change your salt keys from your wp-config.php file under root directory. You can generate new keys from here. It will force all users to have to log in again.
- Change your all passwords associated with site at regular interval.
- Use strong passwords for all logins. Include the mixture of atleast one uppercase letter, lowercase letter, special character, number.
- Change your WP-Admin username from admin to some other name.
- Change database prefix from wp_ to some other complicated characters to avoid zero-day SQL injection attacks.
- Remove timthumb script if your site running it as its no longer supported or maintained.
- Use plugins after testing it properly. Going through plugin review, Google search will let you know about the reputation of the plugin.
- Keep track of latest visitors through log files for tracking site users. If you find any suspicious activity at any particular time, then logs files might help you to know a bit about the attacker.
- Change permissions for .htaccess, wp-config.php, themes main files to 444.
- Proper file permissions for other files and folders. Best practice is to use 644 for files and 755 for folders.
- Keep your own system virus free.
- Always try accessing the site credentials from your own system only.
- Validate all user inputs like URL, image uploads etc.
- Keep track of WP-Admin, FTP accounts user section for any unauthorized user.
- You can also use Wordfence plugin to monitor from malicious scripts.
- Put some security to the server on which your site is hosted, either it hosted on dedicated or a shared server.
- Keep updated with latest vulnerabilities.
