#Infrastructure Security
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Vandals Strike Again, Destroying 13 Towers on Ahoada-Yenagoa 132KV Transmission Line
The Ahoada-Yenagoa 132KV transmission line is one of Nigeria’s critical power infrastructures, responsible for delivering electricity to thousands of homes and businesses in the Niger Delta region. However, this vital lifeline has once again fallen victim to the scourge of vandalism. Recently, vandals destroyed 13 towers along this transmission line, causing widespread power outages and…
#132KV transmission line#Ahoada-Yenagoa#electricity disruption#energy crisis#infrastructure security#Niger Delta#power infrastructure#power outage#Touchaheart.com.ng#tower destruction#vandalism
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Mitigating Risks: The Role of Critical Infrastructure Protection

Critical infrastructure serves as the backbone of modern societies, encompassing a wide range of systems and assets vital for maintaining essential services and economic stability. However, these assets are susceptible to various risks, including natural disasters, cyberattacks, and physical threats.
Identifying Vulnerabilities
The first step in mitigating risks to critical infrastructure is identifying vulnerabilities within key systems and assets.
By conducting thorough risk assessments and vulnerability analyses, stakeholders can pinpoint potential weaknesses and prioritize mitigation efforts to enhance resilience and security.
Implementing Multi-Layered Defenses
Mitigating risks to Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) requires the implementation of multi-layered defense mechanisms.
This may involve deploying physical security measures such as barriers, surveillance systems, and access controls, as well as cybersecurity protocols to protect against digital threats.
Enhancing Situational Awareness
Maintaining situational awareness is essential for effectively mitigating risks to critical infrastructure.
By leveraging advanced monitoring and surveillance technologies, stakeholders can detect potential threats in real-time, allowing for timely response and mitigation actions.
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#Critical Infrastructure Protection#Infrastructure Security#Risk Mitigation#Resilience Planning#Emergency Preparedness#Cybersecurity#Physical Security#Public Safety
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Cyber Security Market Size, Share, Research, Trends and Forecast to 2030
According to a recent report published by Allied Market Research, titled, “Cyber Security Market by Component, Solution, Deployment Model, Enterprise Size, and Industry Vertical: Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021–2030,”
The global cyber security market size was valued at $197.36 billion in 2020, and is projected to reach $478.68 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 9.5% from 2021 to 2030.
Download Sample Research Report: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/request-sample/1770

Cybersecurity is critical because it safeguards all types of data against theft and loss. Sensitive data, personally identifiable information (PII), protected health information (PHI), personal information, intellectual property, data, and governmental and industry information systems all fall under this category. Global connection and the use of cloud services such as Amazon Web Services, to store sensitive data and personal information are raising both inherent and residual risk. The chance of a firm being the victim of a successful cyber assault or data breach is on the rise, owing to widespread inadequate cloud service configuration and increasingly adept cyber thieves. Furthermore, the key factor that drives the growth of the cyber security market includes rise in malware and phishing threats among enterprises and increase in adoption of IoT and BYOD trend is boosting the growth of the global cyber security market. In addition, surge in demand for cloud-based cybersecurity solutions positively impacts the growth of the market. However, budget constraints among organizations and complexities of device security hamper the cyber security market growth. On the contrary, increase in adoption of mobile device applications and platforms, need for strong authentication methods, and transformation in traditional antivirus software industry are expected to offer remunerative opportunities for expansion of the market during the forecast period.
Region wise, the cyber security market was dominated by North America in 2020 and is expected to retain its position during the forecast period, owing to increase in number of data breaches and cyber-attacks. However, Asia-Pacific is expected to witness significant growth during the forecast period, owing to increase in adoption of work from home policy by majority of the companies.
With the wake of COVID-19 pandemic, many cyber security industry vendors are adopting various business and marketing strategies, including innovating their product portfolio and trying to come up with more advanced & suitable solutions as per clients’ needs. For instance, in September 2020, Mandiant announced the launch of new cyber security services to support Microsoft technologies. New services bring together Mandiant expertise and intelligence with Microsoft security products to provide an unprecedented level of security capabilities for customers. Moreover, Vodafone Business is joining forces with one of the leading players in cyber security industry, Accenture to help European businesses in making their cybersecurity up-to-date. The partnership will allow smaller companies to protect themselves with advanced solutions that may otherwise be beyond their comprehension. For instance, in November 2020, Ping Identity — an intelligent identity solutions provider — acquired authorization solutions provider Symphonic Software, to help enterprises prevent cyber frauds and enhance their cyber security.
Inquiry Before Buying: https://www.alliedmarketresearch.com/purchase-enquiry/1770
Key Findings Of The Study
By component, the software segment accounted for the largest cyber security market share in 2020.
By region, North America generated highest revenue in 2020.
By enterprise size, the large enterprise generated the highest revenue in 2020.
The key players profiled in the cyber security market analysis are Accenture, Broadcom Inc., Capgemini, Cognizant, F5 Networks Inc., FireEye Inc., HCL Technologies Limited, IBM Corporation, Infosys Limited, L&T Technology Services Limited, PwC International Limited Broadcom Inc., Tata Consultancy Services, Tech Mahindra Limited, and Wipro Limited. These players have adopted various strategies to increase their market penetration and strengthen their position in the cyber security industry.
About Us:
Allied Market Research (AMR) is a full-service market research and business-consulting wing of Allied Analytics LLP based in Portland, Oregon. Allied Market Research provides global enterprises as well as medium and small businesses with unmatched quality of “Market Research Reports Insights” and “Business Intelligence Solutions.” AMR has a targeted view to provide business insights and consulting to assist its clients to make strategic business decisions and achieve sustainable growth in their respective market domain.
Contact Us:
David Correa
1209 Orange Street
Corporation Trust Center
Wilmington
New Castle
Delaware 19801
USA Int’l: +1–503–894–6022
Toll Free: +1–800–792–5285
Fax: +1–800–792–5285
#cyber security#Infrastructure Security#Governance Risk & Compliance#Identity & Access Management#Data Security#Privacy Service Offering
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The administration disbanded an FBI task force investigating foreign influence campaigns, and cut several Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency staff.
NEW YORK (AP) — When a suspicious video of ballots being ripped up in Pennsylvania gained attention on social media last October, federal agencies responded quickly and called it out as Russian disinformation.
On Election Day in November, bomb threats to polling places in numerous states caused relatively few disruptions to voting. It’s one of the many scenarios covered by the nation’s cybersecurity agency in its outreach to state and local officials.
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PLOIESTI, ROMANIA.
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are they capacitors? they took me by surprise on a walk
#unfortunately‚ the big substation is 2km away‚ beyond a security checkpoint‚ and I have nobody to ply with alcohol or oral sex#in order to gain access#but there is still a small substation (not pictured)#electrical infrastructure
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John Nichols at The Nation:
Donald Trump has made no secret of his determination to govern as a “dictator” if he regains the presidency, and that’s got his critics warning that his reelection would spell the end of democracy. But Trump and his allies are too smart to go full Kim Jong Un. Rather, the former president’s enthusiasm for the authoritarian regimes of Russia’s Vladimir Putin, Turkey’s Tayyip Erdoğan, and Hungary’s Viktor Orbán suggests the models he would build on: managing elections to benefit himself and his Republican allies; gutting public broadcasting and constraining press freedom; and undermining civil society. Trump, who famously demanded that the results of Georgia’s 2020 presidential voting be “recalculated” to give him a win, wants the trappings of democracy without the reality of electoral consequences. That’s what propaganda experts Edward Herman and Frank Brodhead once described as “demonstration elections,” in which, instead of actual contests, wins are assured for the authoritarians who control the machinery of democracy. The outline for such a scenario emerges from a thorough reading of Project 2025’s Mandate for Leadership, which specifically proposes a Trump-friendly recalculation of the systems that sustain American democracy. The strategy for establishing an American version of Orbán’s “illiberal democracy” is not spelled out in any particular chapter of Mandate. Rather, it is woven throughout the whole of the document, with key elements appearing in the chapters on reworking the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and the Federal Election Commission (FEC). In the section on the DHS, for instance, there’s a plan to eliminate the ability of the agency that monitors election security to prevent the spread of disinformation about voting and vote counting.
How serious a threat to democracy would that pose? Think back to November 2020, when Trump was developing his Big Lie about the election he’d just lost. Trump’s false assertion that the election had been characterized by “massive improprieties and fraud” was tripped up by Chris Krebs, who served as director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) in the DHS. The Republican appointee and his team had established a 24/7 “war room” to work with officials across the country to monitor threats to the security and integrity of the election. The operation was so meticulous that Krebs could boldly announce after the voting was finished: “America, we have confidence in the security of your vote, you should, too.” At the same time, his coordinating team declared, “The November 3rd election was the most secure in American history.” This infuriated Trump, who immediately fired the nation’s top election security official.
In Mandate’s chapter on the DHS, Ken Cuccinelli writes, “Of the utmost urgency is immediately ending CISA’s counter-mis/disinformation efforts. The federal government cannot be the arbiter of truth.” Cuccinelli previously complained that CISA “is a DHS component that the Left has weaponized to censor speech and affect elections.” As for the team that worked so successfully with Krebs to secure the 2020 election, the Project 2025 document declares that “the entirety of the CISA Cybersecurity Advisory Committee should be dismissed on Day One.” The potential impact? “It’s a way of emasculating the agency—that is, it prevents it from doing its job,” says Herb Lin, a cyber-policy and security scholar at Stanford’s Center for International Security and Cooperation.
This is just one way that Project 2025’s cabal of “experts” is scheming to thwart honest discourse about elections and democracy. A chapter on public broadcasting proposes to defund the Corporation for Public Broadcasting as part of a larger plan to upend NPR, PBS, and “other public broadcasters that benefit from CPB funding, including the even-further-to-the Left Pacifica Radio and American Public Media.” More destabilizing than the total funding cut that Project 2025 entertains is a parallel plan to end the status of NPR and Pacifica radio stations as “noncommercial education stations.” That could deny them their current channel numbers at the low end of the radio spectrum (88 to 92 FM)—a move that would open prime territory on the dial for the sort of religious programming that already claims roughly 42 percent of the airwaves that the FCC reserves for noncommercial broadcasting. And don’t imagine that the FCC would be in a position to write new rules that guard against the surrender of those airwaves to the Trump-aligned religious right.
[...]
While project 2025 seeks to rewire the FCC to favor Trump’s allies, it also wants to lock in dysfunction at the Federal Election Commission, the agency that is supposed to govern campaign spending and fundraising. Established 50 years ago, the FEC has six members—three Republicans and three Democrats—who are charged with overseeing the integrity of federal election campaigns. In recent years, however, this even partisan divide has robbed the FEC of its ability to act because, as a group of former FEC employees working with the Campaign Legal Center explained, “three Commissioners of the same party, acting in concert, can leave the agency in a state of deadlock.” As the spending by outside groups on elections “has exponentially increased, foreign nationals and governments have willfully manipulated our elections, and coordination between super PACs and candidates has become commonplace,” the former employees noted. Yet “the FEC [has] deadlocked on enforcement matters more often than not, frequently refusing to even investigate alleged violations despite overwhelming publicly available information supporting them.”
John Nichols wrote in The Nation about how Project 2025’s radical right-wing wishlist of items contains plans to wreck and subvert what is left of America’s democracy.
See Also:
The Nation: June 2024 Issue
#John Nichols#The Nation#Project 2025#Donald Trump#Authoritarianism#FCC#FEC#Federal Elections Commission#Federal Communications Commission#Corporation for Public Broadcasting#Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency#Chris Krebs
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Not my manager starting the shift telling us it's our fault if we don't succeed and that they're looking to lay people off lol
#yay recession! yay everyone losing their jobs & social security & medicare/aid & human rights so the richest man alive can steal more $$$!#“its on you to do well” girl this is fundraising for nonprofits WE CAN'T FUNDRAISE IF NO ONE HAS MONEY!!!#but I'm also sitting here like “this job shouldn't exist bc art education programs should be taxpayer funded” but no one likes that argumen#“taxes bad” NO taxes that get shoveled to cops & military are bad! taxes for education infrastructure & improving lives are good!!#anyway everyone who voted trump 3rd party or abstained did you do it did you teach the dems a lesson and lower grocery prices??? :)#no? you didn't? who could've seen that coming wow they only told everyone exactly what they were gonna do what a shock!
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channeling mari yellowjackets and coping via my own “i’m too sexy” parodies.
#i’m too sexy to be SHOT#too sexy to make the news#too sexy for this town hall meeting#too sexy for failed security infrastructure#ummm#yellowjackets#mari i see you sister
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Why Aren’t We Using Counter-Drone Tech in NJ?
Counter-Unmanned Aerial Systems (C-UAS) Clusters of unidentified drones have been buzzing around New Jersey, raising eyebrows and concerns, especially near critical infrastructure. The U.S. has top-tier counter-drone systems—tech designed to track and neutralize UAVs—yet they aren’t being deployed here. Instead, officials are focused on monitoring and investigating, leaving the public wondering:…

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#Aerial threats#Counter-drone tech#Counter-UAV#Critical infrastructure#Drone sightings#Emergency disruptions#FBI investigation#New Jersey drones#Public safety#Security concerns#Surveillance tech#Tech response#UAV#Unresolved mystery
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AN OPEN LETTER to THE U.S. CONGRESS
Put the Good Jobs for Good Airports standards in the FAA reauthorization bill!
104 so far! Help us get to 250 signers!
I’m calling on you to stand with working people, passengers and our communities by supporting Good Jobs for Good Airports standards (GJGA) in the FAA reauthorization bill. Airports should and can be strong, vibrant drivers of good jobs in every part of our country. The Good Jobs for Good Airports standards are central to that mission and our nation’s future prosperity. Billions of our public dollars are invested in our nation’s aviation system every year, and we must ensure that our public resources serve the public good. That includes ensuring airports better serve the needs of our families, our passengers, our communities and the airport service workers who make it all possible.
It is evident that our air travel industry is in crisis. From record flight cancellations during summer travel peaks to mountains of lost luggage during the holiday travel season. Airports are critical publicly-funded infrastructure vital to the health of our local communities and global economy, but right now airports aren't working the way they should for travelers or airport service workers — a largely Black, brown, multiracial and immigrant service workforce. These working people, including cleaners, wheelchair agents, baggage handlers, concessionaires and ramp workers, keep airports safe and running smoothly even through a global pandemic, climate disasters and busy travel seasons. Yet many are underpaid and underprotected--even as some major airlines rake in record profit and billions of our tax dollars are invested in our national air travel system.
Domestic passenger numbers increased by 80% between 2020 and 2021, total industry employment fell by nearly 14%, leaving airport service workers to sometimes clean entire airplanes in as little as five minutes as many take on additional responsibilities outside of their typical job duties. Meanwhile, wages have barely budged for airport service workers in 20 years. The Good Jobs for Good Airports standards has the power to transform workers’ lives by ensuring airport service workers have the pay and benefits they need to care for their families.
The Good Jobs for Good Airports standards would help build a stronger, safer, more resilient air travel industry by making airport service jobs good jobs with living wages and benefits like affordable healthcare for all airport workers. Airport service workers at more than 130 covered airports would be supported through established wage and benefit standards, putting money back into hundreds of local economies and helping families thrive. If passed over 73% of wage increases will go to workers making $20 or less, estimates show.
I urge you to include the Good Jobs for Good Airports standards in the FAA reauthorization bill, and help ensure our public money serves the public good.
▶ Created on September 20, 2023 by Jess Craven
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#JESSCRAVEN101#PNXUOF#resistbot#FAA reauthorization#Good Jobs for Good Airports#airport workers#aviation industry#public infrastructure#labor rights#economic justice#workers' rights#fair wages#benefits#community support#passenger rights#public investment#economic prosperity#airport service workers#living wages#healthcare#job security#labor standards#economic equity#social welfare#income equality#workplace conditions#economic development#local economies#financial stability#worker empowerment
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DETROIT, UNITED STATES.
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Hii fang, I wanted to ask you if you’ve read or watched Tokyo Revengers, and if you’ve done a character analysis on Mikey? ? I feel like he’s such a complex character and I’m super interested to hear about your thoughts on him. Sorry if you’ve answered this before or haven’t watched it! I just wanted to ask just in case
i have read all of TR and ending aside im a huge fan of the manga
i love mikey!! i think i've written about him once or twice. if i were to read TR in the good year of 2024, i would definitely yanderify the fuck out of that guy LMAOO.
i think he's ultimately just a very damaged character who i'll always defend. he was very clearly unstable for a lot of the series and his general apathy and immorality in other timelines were because of the overarching and inescapable themes of loss in each one. i think the way a lot of people wrote about him at TRs peak was really unsymapthetic djfjsdkksd.
i understand peoples frustration with him i just find him to be a hugely tragic character because he very clearly wants to be because he often contradicts himself . but most importantly he's my handsome and silly little guy
#return to sender#this might sound odd but he reminds me a bit of getou#in that i think these are both emotionally fragile characters who don't have the right moral constitution to deal with grief#both mikey and getou suffered similar losses resulting in them lashing out as a result of whats ultimately sensitivity#they needed a lot more of a support system to keep them stabilized and the system around them failed them#but i felt that people were especially unwilling to show this sympathy to mikey#i assume that that happened because mikey is a real life example of criminality and lack of social security and infrastructure lol#unlike getou who deals with a very fantastical version of suffering that is unimaginable and thus to many people more forgiveable#whereas the behavior mikey displays through the series is not far from reality basically#so much discourse abt that guy was sooo wild lmaoo#he is my silly little baby#dont take any tr meta seriously though its been like 3 years since ive read the series#but i love that guy
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Iran Hit by Major Cyberattack Targeting Nation's Fuel Supply
Critical Infrastructure Security , Cyberwarfare / Nation-State Attacks , Fraud Management & Cybercrime Cyber Group Dubbed Predatory Sparrow Takes Responsibility for Widespread Attack Chris Riotta (@chrisriotta) • December 18, 2023 The Predatory Sparrow group has taken credit for an attack on Iranian gas stations on Dec. 18, 2023. (Image: Shutterstock) Gas stations across Iran abruptly shut…

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#attacks#Critical#cyber#Cybercrime#Cyberwarfare#Fraud#infrastructure#management#nationstate#security
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Peran dan Tugas seorang IT Infrastructure dalam Perusahaan
Seorang profesional IT Infrastructure memiliki peran yang sangat penting dalam sebuah perusahaan karena mereka bertanggung jawab atas desain, implementasi, pemeliharaan, dan keamanan infrastruktur teknologi informasi perusahaan. menurut pengalaman saya selama beberapa tahun bekerja di bidang IT Infrastructure, Berikut adalah beberapa peran dan tugas penting seorang IT Infrastructure dlm…
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#Disaster Recovery#it infrastructure#IT Infrastruktur#IT Security#Peran IT#Technical Support#tugas it
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From traffic management to security, boom barriers are an indispensable part of our modern infrastructure, making our roads safer and more efficient.
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