By Yaniv Vardi on February 23, 2021
Companies Must to Look Beyond Their Own Company to Also Consider the Security Measures Their Immediate Suppliers Have in Place
The number of cyberattacks on industrial sites of all sizes is increasing significantly, with risk spreading across supply chains. An ESG survey of 150 cybersecurity and IT professionals in mid-market and enterprise manufacturing organizations, found 53% say their operational technology (OT) infrastructure is vulnerable to some type of cyberattack, while the same number state that they have already suffered a cyberattack or other security incident in the last 12-24 months that impacted their OT infrastructure. Manufacturers are part of trading partner networks that are intertwined, and when they are compromised, the effects ripple across all parties in the supply chain. The impact of an attack on a first-tier supplier can be just as devastating as if the attack initially penetrated your own OT network. Production lines
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Leslie Anderson
Anderson is the president and chief executive officer of the New Jersey Redevelopment Authority the first and only African-American woman in the nation to lead an independent redevelopment financing agency, and thanks to her effectiveness she has been reappointed to this position by four consecutive governors. Since Anderson took over more than a decade ago, the authority has leveraged nearly $4 billion in new investments – including about $500 million in direct investments – in some of the state’s most economically distressed communities. That funding has been vital to redevelopment efforts around New Jersey, with the authority claiming credit for 15,000 new housing units and more than 10 million square feet of commercial and retail space. And the authority is now poised to play a significant role in the Opportunity Zone program. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, NJRA created the Small Business Lease-Emergency Assistance Grant Program
Events at 3 N.J. colleges were ‘Zoom bombed’. Officials say these ‘terrifying’ incidents are on the rise.
Updated Feb 21, 2021;
Posted Feb 21, 2021
A number of events in New Jersey have recently been disrupted by racist Zoom bombing, in which outsiders join a virtual meeting in order to harass the participants.AFP via Getty Images
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Until it turned ugly.
In a detailed post on the fraternity’s Instagram account, the group said white supremacists Zoom bombed the event, writing racial slurs in the chat, changing their usernames to invoke racism, playing a KKK song that says “Kill all Black people,” and then running a video clip of Black people being brutalized and murdered.
Title: Victor Trammell for Your Black World | Photo courtesy of Rutgers University
At least three universities in New Jersey have reported racist attacks during virtual Black History Month events, CNN reports. Rutgers University, Rider University and the New Jersey Institute of Technology were targeted by “Zoom bombers” who interrupted presentations with racist remarks and imagery.
“The most recent Zoom-bombing attack occurred during the Black History Month programs hosted by the Paul Robeson Cultural Center and the Center for Social Justice Education & LGBTQ Communities,” Rutgers University said in a statement to CNN.
Chancellor
Christopher J. Molloy declined to provide details on the incident, saying the university doesn’t want to “give bigoted individuals a platform by providing details on the incident” but acknowledges “the harm done to Black and LGBTQ members” of the community to “affirm their pain.”
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