
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Welcome back to the Scinary Information Nexus! Pour yourself some mead (or a Texas ale) and join the crew as we tackle some heavy cybersecurity news hitting the K-12 and higher-ed worlds.
This week, Richard Martin, Brazos Wortham, Joseph Hamilton, and Mario Ortiz break down the fallout from the Instructure (Canvas) breach. Threat group Shiny Hunters reportedly exploited a cross-site scripting vulnerability, leading to a massive, undisclosed ransom payment. Now, school districts are stuck in a regulatory nightmare: how do you report a breach when you don't even know what student data was compromised?
We also talk about the debate over state bans on Chinese-owned technology like Lenovo. While Texas Cyber Command maintains a strict Prohibited Technologies list for state agencies, Lenovo currently remains unbanned despite federal security warnings.
We look at the reality of outright hardware bans versus just blocking network traffic. Plus, we clear up the dangerous confusion between Lenovo-owned Motorola Mobility and American-owned Motorola Solutions (which emergency services use). Expanding these state mandates could be a devastating financial hit to public schools already dealing with budget deficits.
In this episode, we discuss:
Does the state's approach to cybersecurity actually make schools less secure? Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
Connect with Scinary Cybersecurity:
00:00 Intro
By Scinary CybersecurityWelcome back to the Scinary Information Nexus! Pour yourself some mead (or a Texas ale) and join the crew as we tackle some heavy cybersecurity news hitting the K-12 and higher-ed worlds.
This week, Richard Martin, Brazos Wortham, Joseph Hamilton, and Mario Ortiz break down the fallout from the Instructure (Canvas) breach. Threat group Shiny Hunters reportedly exploited a cross-site scripting vulnerability, leading to a massive, undisclosed ransom payment. Now, school districts are stuck in a regulatory nightmare: how do you report a breach when you don't even know what student data was compromised?
We also talk about the debate over state bans on Chinese-owned technology like Lenovo. While Texas Cyber Command maintains a strict Prohibited Technologies list for state agencies, Lenovo currently remains unbanned despite federal security warnings.
We look at the reality of outright hardware bans versus just blocking network traffic. Plus, we clear up the dangerous confusion between Lenovo-owned Motorola Mobility and American-owned Motorola Solutions (which emergency services use). Expanding these state mandates could be a devastating financial hit to public schools already dealing with budget deficits.
In this episode, we discuss:
Does the state's approach to cybersecurity actually make schools less secure? Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
Connect with Scinary Cybersecurity:
00:00 Intro