ng 2024 Martin J. Forman Lecture | Supporting and shaping the global nutrition agenda with evidence By www.youtube.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 21:19:24 GMT Full Article
ng 2024 Martin J. Forman Lecture | Supporting and shaping the global nutrition agenda with evidence By www.youtube.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 21:21:07 GMT Full Article
ng Supporting and shaping the global nutrition agenda with evidence: A three-decade journey of resea… By www.youtube.com Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 03:46:41 GMT Full Article
ng Cybersecurity Snapshot: New Guides Offer Best Practices for Preventing Shadow AI and for Deploying Secure Software Updates By www.tenable.com Published On :: Fri, 25 Oct 2024 09:00:00 -0400 Looking for help with shadow AI? Want to boost your software updates’ safety? New publications offer valuable tips. Plus, learn why GenAI and data security have become top drivers of cyber strategies. And get the latest on the top “no-nos” for software security; the EU’s new cyber law; and CISOs’ communications with boards.Dive into six things that are top of mind for the week ending Oct. 25.1 - CSA: How to prevent “shadow AI” As organizations scale up their AI adoption, they must closely track their AI assets to secure them and mitigate their cyber risk. This includes monitoring the usage of unapproved AI tools by employees — an issue known as “shadow AI.”So how do you identify, manage and prevent shadow AI? You may find useful ideas in the Cloud Security Alliance’s new “AI Organizational Responsibilities: Governance, Risk Management, Compliance and Cultural Aspects” white paper.The white paper covers shadow AI topics including:Creating a comprehensive inventory of AI systemsConducting gap analyses to spot discrepancies between approved and actual AI usageImplementing ways to detect unauthorized AI waresEstablishing effective access controlsDeploying monitoring techniques “By focusing on these key areas, organizations can significantly reduce the risks associated with shadow AI, ensuring that all AI systems align with organizational policies, security standards, and regulatory requirements,” the white paper reads.For example, to create an inventory that offers the required visibility into AI assets, the document explains different elements each record should have, such as:The asset’s descriptionInformation about its AI modelsInformation about its data sets and data sourcesInformation about the tools used for its development and deploymentDetailed documentation about its lifecycle, regulatory compliance, ethical considerations and adherence to industry standardsRecords of its access control mechanismsShadow AI is one of four topics covered in the publication, which also unpacks risk management; governance and compliance; and safety culture and training.To get more details, read:The full “AI Organizational Responsibilities: Governance, Risk Management, Compliance and Cultural Aspects” white paperA complementary slide presentationThe CSA blog “Shadow AI Prevention: Safeguarding Your Organization’s AI Landscape”For more information about AI security issues, including shadow AI, check out these Tenable blogs:“Do You Think You Have No AI Exposures? Think Again”“Securing the AI Attack Surface: Separating the Unknown from the Well Understood”“Never Trust User Inputs -- And AI Isn't an Exception: A Security-First Approach”“6 Best Practices for Implementing AI Securely and Ethically”“Compromising Microsoft's AI Healthcare Chatbot Service”2 - Best practices for secure software updatesThe security and reliability of software updates took center stage in July when an errant update caused massive and unprecedented tech outages globally.To help prevent such episodes, U.S. and Australian cyber agencies have published “Safe Software Deployment: How Software Manufacturers Can Ensure Reliability for Customers.”“It is critical for all software manufacturers to implement a safe software deployment program supported by verified processes, including robust testing and measurements,” reads the 12-page document.Although the guide is aimed primarily at commercial software vendors, its recommendations can be useful for any organization with software development teams that deploy updates internally. The guide outlines key steps for a secure software development process, including planning; development and testing; internal rollout; and controlled rollout. It also addresses errors and emergency protocols.“A safe software deployment process should be integrated with the organization’s SDLC, quality program, risk tolerance, and understanding of the customer’s environment and operations,” reads the guide, authored by the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the FBI and the Australian Cyber Security Centre.To get more details, read:The “Safe Software Deployment: How Software Manufacturers Can Ensure Reliability for Customers” guideThe CISA alert “CISA, US, and International Partners Release Joint Guidance to Assist Software Manufacturers with Safe Software Deployment Processes”For more information about secure software updates:“Tenable’s Software Update Process Protects Customers’ Business Continuity with a Safe, Do-No-Harm Design” (Tenable)“The critical importance of robust release processes” (Cloud Native Computing Foundation)“Software Deployment Security: Risks and Best Practices” (DevOps.com)“Software Updates, A Double-Edged Sword for Cybersecurity Professionals” (Infosecurity)“DevOps Best Practices for Faster and More Reliable Software Delivery” (DevOps.com)3 - Report: GenAI, attack variety, data security drive cyber strategiesWhat issues act as catalysts for organizations’ cybersecurity actions today? Hint: They’re fairly recent concerns. The promise and peril of generative AI ranks first. It’s closely followed by the ever growing variety of cyberattacks; and by the intensifying urgency to protect data.That’s according to CompTIA’s “State of Cybersecurity 2025” report, based on a survey of almost 1,200 business and IT pros in North America and in parts of Europe and Asia. These three key factors, along with others like the scale of attacks, play a critical role in how organizations currently outline their cybersecurity game plans.“Understanding these drivers is essential for organizations to develop proactive and adaptive cybersecurity strategies that address the evolving threat landscape and safeguard their digital assets,” reads a CompTIA blog about the report.Organizations are eagerly trying to understand both how generative AI can help their cybersecurity programs and how this technology is being used by malicious actors to make cyberattacks harder to detect and prevent.Meanwhile, concern about data protection has ballooned in the past couple of years. “As organizations become more data-driven, the need to protect sensitive information has never been more crucial,” reads the blog.Not only are organizations focused on securing data at rest, in transit and in use, but they’re also creating foundational data-management practices, according to the report.“The rise of AI has accelerated the need for robust data practices in order to properly train AI algorithms, and the demand for data science continues to be strong as businesses seek competitive differentiation,” the report reads.To get more details, read:The report’s announcement “Cybersecurity success hinges on full organizational support, new CompTIA report asserts”CompTIA’s blogs “Today’s top drivers for cybersecurity strategy” and “Cybersecurity’s maturity: CompTIA’s State of Cybersecurity 2025 report”The full “State of Cybersecurity 2025” reportFor more information about data security posture management (DSPM) and preventing AI-powered attacks, check out these Tenable resources:“Harden Your Cloud Security Posture by Protecting Your Cloud Data and AI Resources” (blog)“Know Your Exposure: Is Your Cloud Data Secure in the Age of AI?” (on-demand webinar)“The Data-Factor: Why Integrating DSPM Is Key to Your CNAPP Strategy” (blog)“Mitigating AI-Related Security Risks” (on-demand webinar)“Securing the AI Attack Surface: Separating the Unknown from the Well Understood” (blog)4 - CISA lists software dev practices most harmful for securityRecommended best practices abound in the cybersecurity world. However, CISA and the FBI are taking the opposite tack in their quest to improve the security of software products: They just released a list of the worst security practices that software manufacturers ought to avoid.Titled “Product Security Bad Practices,” the document groups the “no-nos” into three main categories: product properties; security features; and organizational processes and policies.“It’s 2024, and basic, preventable software defects continue to enable crippling attacks against hospitals, schools, and other critical infrastructure. This has to stop,” CISA Director Jen Easterly said in a statement.“These product security bad practices pose unacceptable risks in this day and age, and yet are all too common,” she added. Here are some of the worst practices detailed in the document, which is part of CISA’s “Secure by Design” effort:Using programming languages considered “memory unsafe”Including user-provided input in SQL query stringsReleasing a product with default passwordsReleasing a product with known and exploited vulnerabilitiesNot using multi-factor authenticationFailing to disclose vulnerabilities in a timely mannerAlthough the guidance is aimed primarily at software makers whose products are used by critical infrastructure organizations, the recommendations apply to all software manufacturers.If you’re interested in sharing your feedback with CISA and the FBI, you can submit comments about the document until December 16, 2024 on the Federal Register.To get more details, check out:CISA’s announcement “CISA and FBI Release Product Security Bad Practices for Public Comment”The full document “Product Security Bad Practices”For more information about how to develop secure software:“Tenable Partners with CISA to Enhance Secure By Design Practices” (Tenable)“Ensuring Application Security from Design to Operation with DevSecOps” (DevOps.com)“What is application security?” (TechTarget)“Guidelines for Software Development (Australian Cyber Security Centre)5 - New EU law focuses on cybersecurity of connected digital productsMakers of digital products — both software and hardware — that directly or indirectly connect to networks and to other devices will have to comply with specific cybersecurity safeguards in the European Union.A newly adopted law known as the “Cyber Resilience Act” outlines cybersecurity requirements for the design, development, production and lifecycle maintenance of these types of products, including IoT wares such as connected cars. For example, it specifies a number of “essential cybersecurity requirements” for these products, including that they:Aren’t shipped with known exploitable vulnerabilitiesFeature a “secure by default” configurationCan fix their vulnerabilities via automatic software updatesOffer access protection via control mechanisms, such as authentication and identity managementProtect the data they store, transmit and process using, for example, at-rest and in-transit encryption“The new regulation aims to fill the gaps, clarify the links, and make the existing cybersecurity legislative framework more coherent, ensuring that products with digital components (...) are made secure throughout the supply chain and throughout their lifecycle,” reads a statement from the EU’s European Council.The law will “enter into force” after its publication in the EU’s official journal and will apply and be enforceable 36 months later, so most likely in October 2027 or November 2027. However, some of its provisions will be enforceable a year prior.For more information and analysis about the EU’s Cyber Resilience Act:“Cyber Resilience Act Requirements Standards Mapping” (ENISA)“The Cyber Resilience Act, an Accidental European Alien Torts Statute?” (Lawfare)“EU Cybersecurity Regulation Adopted, Impacts Connected Products” (National Law Review)“Open source foundations unite on common standards for EU’s Cyber Resilience Act” (TechCrunch)“The Cyber Resilience Act: A New Era for Mobile App Developers” (DevOps.com)VIDEOThe EU Cyber Resilience Act: A New Era for Business Engagement in Open Source Software (Linux Foundation) 6 - UK cyber agency: CISOs must communicate better with boardsCISOs and boards of directors are struggling to understand each other, and this is increasing their organizations’ cyber risk, new research from the U.K.’s cyber agency has found.For example, in one alarming finding, 80% of respondents, which included board members, CISOs and other cyber leaders in medium and large enterprises, confessed to being unsure of who is ultimately accountable for cybersecurity in their organizations.“We found that in many organisations, the CISO (or equivalent role) thought that the Board was accountable, whilst the Board thought it was the CISO,” reads a blog about the research titled “How to talk to board members about cyber.”As a result, the U.K. National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) has released new guidance aimed at helping CISOs better communicate with their organizations’ boards titled “Engaging with Boards to improve the management of cyber security risk.”“Cyber security is a strategic issue, which means you must engage with Boards on their terms and in their language to ensure the cyber risk is understood, managed and mitigated,” the document reads.Here’s a small sampling of the advice:Understand your audience, including who are the board’s members and their areas of expertise; and how the board works, such as its meeting formats and its committees.Talk about cybersecurity in terms of risks, and outline these risks concretely and precisely, presenting them in a matter-of-fact way.Don’t limit your communication with board members to formal board meetings. Look for opportunities to talk to them individually or in small groups outside of these board meetings.Elevate the discussions so that you link cybersecurity with your organization’s business challenges, goals and context.Aim to provide a holistic view, and avoid using technical jargon.Aim to advise instead of to educate. Full Article
ng Securing Financial Data in the Cloud: How Tenable Can Help By www.tenable.com Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 09:00:00 -0500 Preventing data loss, complying with regulations, automating workflows and managing access are four key challenges facing financial institutions. Learn how Tenable can help.Imagine a bustling bank, made not of bricks and mortar, but of a swirling mass of data in the cloud. Account numbers, transaction histories and personally identifiable information (PII) zip across servers, powering the financial world. Holding all this sensitive data requires tremendous care. Therefore, securing this sensitive information is paramount.This is where Tenable Cloud Security steps in, offering a data security shield specifically designed for the unique needs of financial institutions.The challenge: A data deluge demands vigilanceFinancial institutions generate massive volumes of data daily. While the public cloud offers unparalleled capacity to store such data, along with agility and scalability, the cloud also expands the attack surface. Legacy cybersecurity solutions are often unable to manage — let alone secure — the sheer volume of data and the variety of ways it is accessed, leaving organizations exposed to malicious actors. At the same time, financial institutions must keep up with new and evolving compliance standards and regulations set forth by governing bodies. Financial institutions need a security platform that helps them protect their data and maintain compliance.Tenable Cloud Security’s advantage: Seeing beyond the wallsTenable Cloud Security actively scrutinizes every corner of the cloud data vault, continuously and automatically."Without [Tenable Cloud Security], we would've been virtually blind to risks and threats impacting our sensitive data. [Tenable Cloud Security] allows us to preempt any issues and meet the requirements we're receiving from our business partners, with minimal effort.— VP Security at a leading Fintech platformHere's how Tenable empowers financial institutions:Protecting sensitive data: Tenable doesn't just guard the door; it knows what's inside and how to best protect it. It identifies and labels all data, like financial records and social security numbers, understanding its sensitivity and prioritizing its protection.Continuous monitoring: Imagine guards constantly scanning every inch of the vault. Tenable does the same digitally, using advanced technology to constantly search for suspicious activity and potential breaches. Any unusual movement of the data, either exfiltration or copying to a different and inaccessible location, triggers an alarm, allowing for immediate intervention.Policy enforcement: Just like a vault needs clear access protocols, so does your data. Tenable automates setting and enforcing cybersecurity policies across the entire cloud, ensuring everyone plays by the book and no unauthorized hands touch the valuables.Following mandated regulations: Financial institutions juggle a complex set of regulations and industry standards like the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI-DSS). Tenable simplifies compliance with a host of international regulations by providing timely reports and audit trails.Beyond traditional security: More than just a lockModern technology stacks for data storage require a modern cybersecurity stack. Traditional security solutions are unable to address the unique risks associated with storing data in cloud technologies. Financial organizations that leverage Tenable’s data security platform are able to meet existing and future challenges, including:Preventing data loss: Early detection and prevention of unauthorized data access can help organizations minimize financial losses and reputational damage, keeping valuable assets safe from even the most cunning thieves.Complying with regulations: Automated reports and adherence to the most stringent regulations and industry standards ensure compliance, saving time and resources.Automating workflows: Tenable automates tasks and provides deeper insights into how data behaves, enabling organizations to free up their valuable resources for other endeavors and make their security teams more efficient.Managing access: Just like knowing who has access to the vault is crucial. Tenable tracks who and what has access to data, ensuring only authorized parties can handle the data.The future of financial security is data-centricTenable Cloud Security's data-centric approach positions it as a valuable partner, not just for guarding the perimeter but for understanding the inner workings of the vault and the most sensitive data within it. By leveraging Tenable’s capabilities, financial institutions can confidently embrace the cloud while ensuring the highest level of security for their most valuable assets — their data.To learn more about how you can secure your dataWebinar: Know Your Exposure: Is Your Cloud Data Secure in the Age of AI?Data Sheet: Data Security in a Unified Cloud Security SolutionInfographic: When CNAPP met DSPMDemo Video Full Article
ng Context Is King: From Vulnerability Management to Exposure Management By www.tenable.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 08:30:00 -0500 Vulnerability management remains a cornerstone of preventive cybersecurity, but organizations still struggle with vulnerability overload and sophisticated threats. Tenable’s new Exposure Signals gives security teams comprehensive context, so they can shift from vulnerability management to exposure management and effectively prioritize high-risk exposures across their complex attack surface.A critical vulnerability has been disclosed and attackers worldwide are actively exploiting it in the wild. Your vulnerability management team jumps into action and determines that the vulnerability is present in hundreds of your organization’s assets. Which ones do you patch first? How do you prioritize your remediation efforts? What criteria do you use? The clock is ticking. Hackers are on the prowl.Historically, your vulnerability management team would rely on severity scores like Vulnerability Priority Rating (VPR). This is a great start, but only gives you one indicator of risk. To prioritize remediation precisely and effectively, you need to consider a variety of other criteria, such as a vulnerable asset’s type, owner, and function; the access-level and privileges on the asset; and critical attack paths into your environment.This type of comprehensive, holistic context will let you prioritize correctly, but it can only be achieved with a different approach that goes beyond traditional vulnerability management. That approach is exposure management. With exposure management, your vulnerability management team would be able to pinpoint the subset of assets affected by our hypothetical vulnerability that, for example, are externally accessible, possess domain-level privileges and are part of a critical attack path. That way they would know where the greatest risk is and what they need to remediate first. Having this deep insight, context and visibility transforms the risk assessment equation, and allows your vulnerability management team to move decisively, quickly and strategically.In this blog, we’ll outline why it’s imperative for your vulnerability management teams to shift to an exposure management mindset, and we’ll explain how Tenable can help them do it.To pinpoint riskiest vulns, vulnerability management needs broader exposure context In today's evolving cybersecurity landscape, vulnerability management remains one of the foundational pieces of an organization's proactive defense strategy. However, these teams still have difficulty in addressing the increased level of risks posed by the continuous surge of Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs) and other flaws.Many security teams are frequently overwhelmed by the sheer volume of vulnerabilities with limited resources to manage them effectively. The sophistication and speed of threat actors has escalated, with attackers having more entry points and using new tactics, techniques and procedures to access other critical areas of the business - demonstrating that attacks are no longer linear but multifaceted.It’s common for security teams to struggle with:Vulnerability overload - This long-standing problem keeps getting worse. Security teams are finding it more difficult than ever to sift through the avalanche of CVEs and identify the areas of the business that have the most risk. Lack of exposure context for prioritization - Your teams are making decisions while missing layers of context. Threat intelligence and vulnerability severity are a great start, but limiting yourself to them doesn’t give you the full context you need to prioritize properly. Slow remediation response - Both proactive and reactive security teams devote massive amounts of time to responding to critical vulnerabilities. Resources are spread thin, making it more important than ever for teams to confidently identify the most high risk exposures when recommending remediation efforts.Need to shift from a vulnerability to an exposure mindsetKnowing the struggles that you are dealing with today can help illuminate the benefits of exposure management. The missing links between a vulnerability and an exposure are the additional layers of context. Having multidimensional context enables you to understand not just the vulnerabilities themselves but their potential impact within the broader attack surface. This approach provides a more comprehensive view of an organization's security posture by considering factors such as threat intelligence, asset criticality, identities and access, as well as other pieces of context. With this additional information, you spend significantly less time sorting through stacks of similar vulnerabilities and you can be more focused on identifying key issues that pose risk - exposures.For those who have never heard of exposure management or are just getting started, there are many benefits to this discipline. When it comes to Tenable’s approach, we adopt that same mentality with our exposure management platform. The goal is simple: exposure management empowers organizations to prioritize remediation efforts more effectively. It surfaces information that helps develop strategies to address not only the vulnerabilities themselves but the emergence of exposures that could lead to significant breaches.The jump from vulnerability to exposureBridging the gap from vulnerability management to exposure management requires connecting context across the entire attack surface. Vulnerability management provides context that predicts the likelihood of an attack and displays key drivers, age of vulnerability and threat sources. These attributes are helpful, but we can go much further to improve our prioritization effectiveness. This requires having broader visibility and deeper insights across the attack surface to understand the bigger picture of exposures.Specifically, security teams need additional context around:Asset context - There are many levels to an asset that can help drive prioritization decisions. It’s key to understand the criticality of an asset related to its type, function, owner name and its relationships to other assets. Even knowing if the asset is accessible from the internet or not will shape how its remediation is prioritized. Identities - Identities serve as the cornerstone for successful attacks, so it’s key to contextualize them for exposure management. Understanding user-privilege levels, entitlements and user information can help prevent attackers from gaining privilege escalation and moving laterally. Focusing prioritization efforts on vulnerable assets with domain and admin-level privileges is a critical best practice in order to reduce the likelihood of a breach. Threat context - Having various levels of threat context is also important to prioritize exposures. We know that threats change over time, so leveraging dynamic scoring like VPR or Asset Exposure Score (AES) can show indicators of risk. We can also bring in context from attack path modeling to influence remediation decisions based on the attacker’s perspective by understanding the number of critical attack paths or choke points in your environment.When security analysts have this additional information, they can now truly understand the breadth and depth of the exposure. This is how prioritization is done in this new world of exposure management.Introducing Exposure SignalsTo help make it easier for you to shift to this exposure management mindset, we have developed a new prioritization capability called Exposure Signals. Available in Tenable One, Tenable’s exposure management platform, Exposure Signals allows security teams to have more comprehensive context in a centralized place for a focused view of risk. There are two ways to use these new Exposure Signals. The first is to access a comprehensive library of high-risk, prebuilt signals. Easy to refer to, they signal potential risk in your environment and create a great starting point for you to get your exposure management juices flowing. For example, you can easily see and refer to: Domain admin group on internet-exposed hosts with critical vulnerabilitiesDevices exposed to the internet via RDP with an associated identity account with a compromised passwordCloud assets with critical severity findings and asset exposure score above 700Exposure Signals allow you to track the number of violations that signal high-risk scenarios in your environment. View this list on a regular basis to see how it changes over time with its unique trendline. Take exploration into your own hands by viewing the impacted asset and its contextual intelligence in our Inventory Module. The second way to use Exposure Signals is by creating your own signals using a query builder or natural language processing (NLP) search powered by ExposureAI. That way, you can go as broad or as precise as needed. For example, let’s say there is a new zero day vulnerability that sweeps the industry, similar to Log4Shell. You can easily create a signal to target which assets have the vulnerability, are internet facing and have domain admin-level privileges. We are stringing these components together so that you can understand your true risk and better direct your prioritization efforts.To learn more about Tenable One and Exposure Signals, check out our interactive demo: Full Article
ng Cybersecurity Snapshot: CISA Warns of Global Spear-Phishing Threat, While OWASP Releases AI Security Resources By www.tenable.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 09:00:00 -0500 CISA is warning about a spear-phishing campaign that spreads malicious RDP files. Plus, OWASP is offering guidance about deepfakes and AI security. Meanwhile, cybercriminals have amplified their use of malware for fake software-update attacks. And get the latest on CISA’s international plan, Interpol’s cyber crackdown and ransomware trends.Dive into six things that are top of mind for the week ending Nov. 8.1 - CISA: Beware of nasty spear-phishing campaignProactively restrict outbound remote-desktop protocol (RDP) connections. Block transmission of RDP files via email. Prevent RDP file execution.Those are three security measures cyber teams should proactively take in response to an ongoing and “large scale” email spear-phishing campaign targeting victims with malicious RDP files, according to the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA).A foreign threat actor is carrying out the campaign. Several vertical sectors, including government and IT, are being targeted.“Once access has been gained, the threat actor may pursue additional activity, such as deploying malicious code to achieve persistent access to the target’s network,” CISA’s alert reads. Other CISA recommendations include:Adopt phishing-resistant multi-factor authentication (MFA), such as FIDO tokens, and try to avoid SMS-based MFAEducate users on how to spot suspicious emailsHunt for malicious activity in your network looking for indicators of compromise (IoCs) and tactics, techniques and proceduresAlthough CISA didn’t name the hacker group responsible for this campaign, its alert includes links to related articles from Microsoft and AWS that identify it as Midnight Blizzard. Also known as APT29, this group is affiliated with Russia’s government.To get more details, check out the CISA alert “Foreign Threat Actor Conducting Large-Scale Spear-Phishing Campaign with RDP Attachments.”For more information about securing RDP tools:“Commonly Exploited Protocols: Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP)” (Center for Internet Security)“What is remote desktop protocol (RDP)?” (TechTarget)“Wondering Whether RDP IS Secure? Here's a Guide to Remote Desktop Protocol” (AllBusiness)“Why remote desktop tools are facing an onslaught of cyber threats” (ITPro)“'Midnight Blizzard' Targets Networks With Signed RDP Files” (Dark Reading)2 - OWASP issues AI security resourcesHow should your organization respond to deepfakes? What’s the right way of establishing a center of excellence for AI security in your organization? Where can you find a comprehensive guide of tools to secure generative AI applications?These questions are addressed in a new set of resources for AI security from the Open Worldwide Application Security Project’s OWASP Top 10 for LLM Application Security Project. The new resources are meant to help organizations securely adopt, develop and deploy LLM and generative AI systems and applications “with a comprehensive strategy encompassing governance, collaboration and practical tools,” OWASP said in a statement.These are the new resources:“The Guide for Preparing and Responding to Deepfake Events,” which unpacks four types of deepfake schemes – financial fraud, job interview fraud, social engineering and misinformation – and offers guidance about each one in these areas:preparationdetection and analysiscontainment eradication and recoverypost-incident activity“The LLM and GenAI Center of Excellence Guide,” which aims to help CISOs and fellow organization leaders create a center of excellence for generative AI security that facilitates collaboration among various teams, including security, legal, data science and operations, so they can develop:Generative AI security policiesRisk assessment and management processesTraining and awarenessResearch and development“The AI Security Solution Landscape Guide,” which offers security teams a comprehensive catalog of open source and commercial tools for securing LLMs and generative AI applications.To get more details, read OWASP’s announcement “OWASP Dramatically Expands GenAI Security Guidance.”For more information about protecting your organization against deepfakes:“How to prevent deepfakes in the era of generative AI” (TechTarget)“Deepfake scams escalate, hitting more than half of businesses” (Cybersecurity Dive)“The AI Threat: Deepfake or Deep Fake? Unraveling the True Security Risks” (SecurityWeek)“How deepfakes threaten biometric security controls” (TechTarget)“Deepfakes break through as business threat” (CSO)3 - Fake update variants dominate list of top malware in Q3Hackers are doubling down on fake software-update attacks.That’s the main takeaway from the Center for Internet Security’s list of the 10 most prevalent malware used during the third quarter.Malware variants used to carry out fake browser-update attacks took the top four spots on the list: SocGholish, LandUpdate808, ClearFake and ZPHP. Collectively, they accounted for 77% of the quarter’s malware infections. It's the first time LandUpdate808 and ClearFake appear on this quarterly list.(Source: “Top 10 Malware Q3 2024”, Center for Internet Security, October 2024)In a fake software-update attack, a victim gets duped into installing a legitimate-looking update for, say, their preferred browser, that instead infects their computers with malware.Here’s the full list, in descending order:SocGholish, a downloader distributed through malicious websites that tricks users into downloading it by offering fake software updates LandUpdate808, a JavaScript downloader distributed through malicious websites via fake browser updatesClearFake, another JavaScript downloader used for fake browser-update attacksZPHP, another JavaScript downloader used for fake software-update attacksAgent Tesla, a remote access trojan (RAT) that captures credentials, keystrokes and screenshotsCoinMiner, a cryptocurrency miner that spreads using Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI)Arechclient2, also known as SectopRAT, is a .NET RAT whose capabilities include multiple stealth functionsMirai, a malware botnet that compromises IoT devices to launch DDoS attacksNanoCore, a RAT that spreads via malspam as a malicious Excel spreadsheetLumma Stealer, an infostealer used to swipe personally identifiable information (PII), credentials, cookies and banking informationTo get more information, the CIS blog “Top 10 Malware Q3 2024” offers details, context and indicators of compromise for each malware strain.For details on fake update attacks:“Fake browser updates spread updated WarmCookie malware” (BleepingComputer)“Beware: Fake Browser Updates Deliver BitRAT and Lumma Stealer Malware” (The Hacker News)“Hackers Use Fake Browser Updates for AMOS Malware Attacks Targeting Mac Users” (MSSP Alert)“Malware crooks find an in with fake browser updates, in case real ones weren't bad enough” (The Register)“Fake Google Chrome errors trick you into running malicious PowerShell scripts” (BleepingComputer)VIDEOFake Chrome Update Malware (The PC Security Channel)4 - CISA’s first international plan unveiledCISA has released its first-ever international plan, which outlines a strategy for boosting the agency’s collaboration with cybersecurity agencies from other countries.Aligning cybersecurity efforts and goals with international partners is critical for tackling cyberthreats in the U.S. and abroad, according to the agency.The three core pillars of CISA’s “2025 - 2026 International Strategic Plan” are:Help make more resilient other countries’ assets, systems and networks that impact U.S. critical infrastructureBoost the integrated cyber defenses of the U.S. and its international partners against their shared global cyberthreatsUnify the coordination of international activities to strengthen cyberdefenses collectivelyThe plan will allow CISA to “reduce risk to the globally interconnected and interdependent cyber and physical infrastructure that Americans rely on every day,” CISA Director Jen Easterly said in a statement.5 - Interpol hits phishers, ransomware gangs, info stealersInterpol and its partners took down 22,000 malicious IP addresses and seized thousands of servers, laptops, and mobile phones used by cybercriminals to conduct phishing scams, deploy ransomware and steal information.The four-month global operation, titled Synergia II and announced this week, involved law enforcement agencies and private-sector partners from 95 countries and netted 41 arrests.“Together, we’ve not only dismantled malicious infrastructure but also prevented hundreds of thousands of potential victims from falling prey to cybercrime,” Neal Jetton, Director of Interpol’s Cybercrime Directorate, said in a statement.In Hong Kong, more than 1,000 servers were taken offline, while authorities in Macau, China took another 291 servers offline. Meanwhile, in Estonia, authorities seized 80GB of server data, which is now being analyzed for links to phishing and banking malware.For more information about global cybercrime trends:“AI-Powered Cybercrime Cartels on the Rise in Asia” (Dark Reading)“AI Now a Staple in Phishing Kits Sold to Hackers” (MSSP Alert)“The Business of Cybercrime Explodes” (BankDirector)“Nation state actors increasingly hide behind cybercriminal tactics and malware” (CSO)6 - IST: Ransomware attacks surged in 2023Ransomware gangs went into hyperdrive last year, increasing their attacks by 73% compared with 2022, according to the non-profit think tank Institute for Security and Technology (IST).The IST attributes the sharp increase in attacks to a shift by ransomware groups to “big game hunting” – going after prominent, large organizations with deep pockets. “Available evidence suggests that government and industry actions taken in 2023 were not enough to significantly reduce the profitability of the ransomware model,” reads an IST blog.Global Ransomware Incidents in 2023Another takeaway: The ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) model continued to prove extremely profitable in 2023, and it injected dynamism into the ransomware ecosystem. The RaaS model prompted ransomware groups “to shift allegiances, form new groups, or iterate existing variants,” the IST blog reads.The industry sector that ransomware groups hit the hardest was construction, followed by hospitals and healthcare, and by IT services and consulting. Financial services and law offices rounded out the top five.To learn more about ransomware trends:“Ransomware Is ‘More Brutal’ Than Ever in 2024” (Wired)“Ransomware on track for record profits, even as fewer victims pay” (SC Magazine)“How Can I Protect Against Ransomware?” (CISA)“How to prevent ransomware in 6 steps” (TechTarget)“Steps to Help Prevent & Limit the Impact of Ransomware” (Center for Internet Security) Full Article
ng Social Media for Science Outreach – A Case Study: Career changing and pseudonyms By www.nature.com Published On :: Tue, 30 Apr 2013 15:53:34 +0000 To tie in with this month’s SoNYC birthday celebrations, we are hosting a collection of case Full Article Featured Guest Posts Outreach SpotOn NYC (#SoNYC) #reachingoutsci #SoNYC Social Media Case Study
ng Science Communication at a Tipping Point By www.nature.com Published On :: Wed, 15 May 2013 13:04:42 +0000 This has been cross-posted from the nature.com guest blog, Soapbox Science. Liz Neeley is the Full Article Featured Guest Posts Outreach SpotOn NYC (#SoNYC) #reachingoutsci
ng Social Media for Science Outreach – A Case Study: TEDMED Great Challenges By www.nature.com Published On :: Thu, 23 May 2013 13:55:01 +0000 To tie in with this month’s SoNYC birthday celebrations, we are hosting a collection of case Full Article Featured Guest Posts Outreach SpotOn NYC (#SoNYC) Uncategorized #reachingoutsci Social Media Case Study
ng OSC publishes gamification research and launches new trading simulation tool for Investor Education Month By www.osc.ca Published On :: Wed, 09 Oct 2024 12:31:40 GMT TORONTO – The Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) today released a new report that studied the impact of gamification on investors. Full Article
ng OSC consults on improving retail investor access to long-term asset investments By www.osc.ca Published On :: Thu, 10 Oct 2024 13:06:56 GMT TORONTO – The Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) today Full Article
ng Capital Markets Tribunal seeks applications for the Securities Proceedings Advisory Committee By www.osc.ca Published On :: Tue, 22 Oct 2024 13:28:40 GMT TORONTO – The Capital Markets Tribunal is seeking applications for membership to the Securities Proceedings Advisory Committee (SPAC). Full Article
ng OSC study finds ESG ratings greatly influence investor decisions but are difficult to understand By www.osc.ca Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 13:50:36 GMT TORONTO – The Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) today released the results of a study examining the influence of environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors on retail investor decision making. Full Article
ng Canadian securities regulators publish coordinated blanket orders to provide temporary exemptions from certain derivatives data reporting requirements By www.osc.ca Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 17:52:49 GMT TORONTO – The Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) today published Full Article
ng CSA provides update on binding dispute resolution By www.osc.ca Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 21:18:29 GMT TORONTO – The Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) is providing an update to interested parties on the status of its work to introduce binding authority for an independent dispute resolution service. Full Article
ng SpotOn London 2012 Storify: Fixing the fraud: how do we safeguard science from misconduct? By www.nature.com Published On :: Wed, 14 Nov 2012 12:00:49 +0000 #solo12fraud Full Article Featured Policy SpotOn London (#SoLo) Storifys #solo12fraud
ng SpotOn London 2012 Storify: Crowdfunded science – new opportunities or dangerous echo chamber? By www.nature.com Published On :: Wed, 14 Nov 2012 14:55:52 +0000 Finding sources for funding research can be a demanding task, and one that's not always successful. A new trend that's emerging out of the necessity to fund projects that have no traditional means of support is "crowdfunding." A panel at SpotOnLondon weighs the resulting apprehensions and benefits. Full Article Featured Policy SpotOn London (#SoLo) Storifys #solo12funding
ng SpotOn London 2012: My not-so-secret-anymore double life: Juggling research and science communication By www.nature.com Published On :: Mon, 19 Nov 2012 12:52:44 +0000 Dr Anne Osterrieder is a Research and Science Communication Fellow in Plant Cell Biology at the Department of Full Article Policy SpotOn London (#SoLo) #solo12jobs
ng SpotOn London 2012 Storify: Incentivising Open Access and Open Science: Carrot and Stick By www.nature.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Nov 2012 13:12:21 +0000 Here is a Storify round up of the SpotOn London session: Incentivising Open Access and Open Full Article Featured Policy SpotOn London (#SoLo) Storifys #solo12open
ng SpotOn London 2012 Storify: Tackling the terabyte: how should research adapt to the era of big data? By www.nature.com Published On :: Wed, 21 Nov 2012 15:09:37 +0000 Here is a Storify round up of the SpotOn London session: Tackling the terabyte: how should Full Article Featured Policy SpotOn London (#SoLo) Storifys #solo12tera
ng SpotOn London 2013: Altmetrics – The Opportunities and the Challenges By www.nature.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2013 13:52:42 +0000 Marie Boran is a PhD candidate at the INSIGHT Centre for Data Analytics, the National Full Article Featured Guest Posts Policy SpotOn London (#SoLo) #solo13alt
ng SpotOn London 2013: Contract for interdisciplinary working By www.nature.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2013 13:53:59 +0000 In preparation for this year’s SpotOn London 2013 workshop, Interdisciplinary research: what can scientists, humanists Full Article Featured Guest Posts Policy #solo13hss
ng SpotOn London 2013 Storify: Open, Portable, Decoupled – How should Peer Review change? By www.nature.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2013 14:51:25 +0000 Here is a Storify collating the online conversation around the Open, Portable, Decoupled – How should Full Article Featured Outreach SpotOn London (#SoLo) Storifys #solo13peer
ng SpotOn London Storify: Communicating Science in an Open Access World By www.nature.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2013 15:11:14 +0000 Here is a Storify collecting the online conversations from the Communicating Science in an Open Access Full Article Featured Outreach SpotOn London (#SoLo) Storifys #solo13open
ng Attack on Titan. 4, Humanity pushes back! / Hajime Isayama ; [translator, Sheldon Drzka ; lettering, Steve Wands]. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "Humanity pushes back! The Survey Corps develops a risky gambit— have Eren in Titan form attempt to repair Wall Rose, reclaiming human territory from the monsters for the first time in a century. But Titan-Eren's self-control is far from perfect, and when he goes on a rampage, not even Armin can stop him! With the survival of humanity on his massive shoulders, will Eren be able to return to his senses, or will he lose himself forever?"-- Page [4] of cover. Full Article
ng One-punch man. Volume 6 / story by ONE ; art by Yusuke Murata ; translation, John Werry ; touch-up art and lettering, James Gaubatz. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "Nothing about Saitama passes the eyeball test when it comes to superheroes, from his lifeless expression to his bald head to his unimpressive physique. However, this average-looking guy has a not-so-average problem— he just can't seem to find an opponent strong enough to take on! An emergency summons gathers Class S heroes at headquarters … and Saitama tags along. There, they learn that the great seer Shibabawa left the following prophecy: "The Earth is in danger!" What in the world is going to happen?!" -- Description provided by publisher. Full Article
ng One-punch man. Volume 7 / story by ONE ; art by Yusuke Murata ; translation, John Werry ; touch-up art and lettering, James Gaubatz. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: Nothing about Saitama passes the eyeball test when it comes to superheroes, from his lifeless expression to his bald head to his unimpressive physique. However, this average-looking guy has a not-so-average problem-he just can't seem to find an opponent strong enough to take on! When aliens invade Earth, a group of Class-S heroes finally finds a way to fight back and go on the offensive. Inside the enemy mother ship, Saitama fights Boros. Faced with the alien's frightful power, he decides to get serious! What is the Earth's fate?! Full Article
ng One-punch man. 10 / story by ONE ; art by Yusuke Murata ; translation, John Werry ; touch-up art & lettering, James Gaubatz. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "Hero hunter Gato intensifies his onslaught, so of course Saitama decides now is the perfect time to join a combat tournament. Meanwhile, Class-S hero Metal Bat takes an assignment guarding a Hero Association executive and his son, and before long trouble appears!" -- Description provided by publisher. Full Article
ng Wanpanman. English By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: Class-S hero King is known as the strongest man on earth, but when a mysterious organization sends an assassin after him, the shocking truth about King is revealed. Full Article
ng Outcast. Volume 2, A vast and unending ruin / Robert Kirkman, creator, writer ; Paul Azaceta, artist ; Elizabeth Breitweiser, colorist ; Rus Wooton, letterer. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: Kyle Barnes has been plagued by demonic possession all his life. In light of recent revelations, he finally feels like he's starting to piece together the answers he's looking for. But while he feels a new sense of purpose is Reverend Anderson's life falling apart? Full Article
ng Outcast. Volume 4, Under Devil's wing / Robert Kirkman, creator, writer ; Paul Azaceta, artist ; Elizabeth Breitweiser, colorist ; Rus Wooton, letterer. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "Answers are given, secrets are revealed, and the Barnes family has never been in more danger. Allison learns that there's something very special about her daughter, bu where's Kyle? Will Anderson risk everything to save him?' -- Page 4 of cover. Full Article
ng Something is killing the children. Volume 3 / written by James Tynion IV ; illustrated by Werther Dell'Edera ; colored by Miquel Muerto ; lettered by AndWorld Design ; cover by Werther Dell'Edera with colors by Miquel Muerto. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "As the House of Slaughter arrives to clean up the situation by any means necessary, Erica will find that the true threat to those around her isn't who— or what— she ever expected. And the cost of saving the day may be too high for anyone to pay … ." -- Description provided by publisher. Full Article
ng The Adventure zone : the crystal kingdom / based on the podcast by Griffin McElroy, Clint McElroy, Travis McElroy, Justin McElroy ; adaptation by Clint McElroy, Carey Pietsch ; art by Carey Pietsch. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "A desperate call for help interrupts holiday celebrations at the Bureau of Balance, and sends Taako, Magnus and Merle on a high-stakes mission to find and reclaim a fourth deadly relic: a powerful transmutation stone, hidden somewhere in the depths of a floating arcane laboratory that's home to the Doctors Maureen and Lucas Miller. An unknown menace has seized control of the stone, and is using it to transform the lab into a virulent pink crystal that spreads to everything it touches. It's only a matter of time before this sparkling disaster crash-lands, but in order to find the stone and save the whole planet from being King Midased, our heroes will have to fight their way through a gauntlet of rowdy robots and crystal golems, decide whether they can trust the evasive Lucas Miller, and solve the mystery of what— or who— has put them all in peril, before there's no world left to save." -- Provided by publisher Full Article
ng Dune. House Atreides. Volume 1 / written by Brian Herbert & Kevin J. Anderson ; illustrated by Dev Pramanik ; lettered by Ed Dukeshire ; colored by Alex Guimarães ; cover by Jae Lee & June Chung. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "Set in the years leading up the Hugo and Nebula Award-winning Dune— 'Dume: House Atreides transports readers to the far future on the desert planet Arrakis where Pardot Kynes seeks its secrets. Meanwhile, a violent coup is planned by the son of Emperor Elrood; an eight-year-old slave Duncan Idaho seeks to escape his cruel masters; and a young man named Leto Atreides begins a fateful journey. These unlikely souls are drawn together first as renegades and then as something more, as they discover their true fate— to change the very shape of history!" -- Description provided by publisher. Full Article
ng Firefly. Blue Sun rising. Part 1 / created by Joss Whedon ; written by Greg Pak ; illustrated by Dan McDaid, Lalit Kumar Sharma, Daniel Bayliss ; colored by Marcelo Costa ; lettered by Jim Campbell. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "Sheriff Mal Reynolds has a new partner— a law enforcing robot from the Blue Sun corporation, who doesn't care about motives, about mercy, about anything other than enforcing the law— no matter the cost. The Blue Sun Corporation has helped to run the universe from the shadows for years, but they're ready to step into the light and take over. If Mal wants to keep his job and protect his sector, the smart move would be to play by their rulebook. But for Mal, there's really one choice— reunite the crew of the Serenity for one last impossible job to save the 'verse. Greg Pak and artist Dan McDaid launch Mal & the crew of Serenity into their biggest war yet, officially continuing Joss Whedon's acclaimed series." -- Provided by publisher. Full Article
ng Asadora! Volume 1 / Naoki Urasawa ; translation & adaptation, John Werry ; touch-up art & lettering, Steve Dutro. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "A deadly typhoon, a mysterious creature and a girl who won't quit. In 2020, a large creature rampages through Tokyo, destroying everything in its path. In 1959, Asa Asada, a spunky young girl from a huge family in Nagoya, is kidnapped for ransom— and not a soul notices. When a typhoon hits Nagoya, Asa and her kidnapper must work together to survive. But there's more to her kidnapper and this storm than meets the eye. When Asa's mother goes into labor yet again, Asa runs off to find a doctor. But no one bats an eye when she doesn't return— not even as a storm approaches Nagoya. Forgotten yet again, Asa runs into a burglar and tries to stop him on her own, a decision that leads to an unlikely alliance." -- Provided by publisher. Full Article
ng Asadora! Volume 2 / by Naoki Urasawa / N Wood Studio ; translation & adaptation, John Werry ; touch-up art & lettering, Steve Dutro. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "Asa and Kasuga see the tail of a giant creature rise from the water. In a jungle, explorers discover massive claw marks in a tree trunk. And years later in 1964, a mysterious military man appears asking all the wrong questions." -- Provided by publisher. Full Article
ng Firefly. Blue Sun rising. Part 2 / created by Joss Whedon ; written by Greg Pak ; illustrated by Dan McDaid, Lalit Kumar Sharma, Daniel Bayliss ; inks by Vincenzo Federici ; colored by Marcelo Costa ; lettered by Jim Campbell. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "The stage is set for the final battle as the first ever Firefly event concludes, with Sheriff Mal Reynolds— yeah, he's still getting used to it too— making a choice that may cost him those he loves most, whether he knows it or not … Shocking losses lead to stunning decisions as Mal and the crew of Serenity must face the consequences of their choices in war against the Blue Sun Corporation. The 'Verse is changing in ways no one ever expected— and a new chapter of Firefly begins here." -- Provided by publisher. Full Article
ng The rose of Versailles. Volume 4 / Ryoko Ikeda ; translation: Jocelyne Allen ; lettering and touch up: Jeannie Lee. By library.gcpl.lib.oh.us Published On :: "France spirals towards a civil war, as nobles continue to ignore the people of France. Noblewoman Oscar Fraṅois de Jarjayes is forced to reconsider her life as a soldier and a woman, her loyalties and her love. Marie Antoinette and the royal family seek escape, while Robespierre and the National Assembly take up arms and demand democracy." -- Provided by publisher. Full Article
ng SpotOn London Storify: How are online tools changing science education? By www.nature.com Published On :: Thu, 21 Nov 2013 14:28:55 +0000 Here is a Storify collecting the online conversations from the “How are online tools changing Full Article SpotOn London (#SoLo) Storifys Tools #solo13edu
ng SpotOn London 2014 – Fringe Events By www.nature.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Oct 2014 17:00:12 +0000 To accompany this year’s SpotOn London conference, at the Wellcome Trust on Friday, 14 November Full Article Featured SpotOn London (#SoLo) #solo14
ng SpotOn London 2013: Thank you to this year’s livestreaming team! By www.nature.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2013 12:08:38 +0000 In true adherence to the age old phrase 'let them eat cake' and its traditional application to the under-funded and under-fed masses, for SpotOn London cakes were duly provided much to the enjoyment of the delegates. Since this act generated its own hashtag, it also deserves a Story... Full Article SpotOn London (#SoLo) #solo13
ng SpotOn London 2013: Open, Portable, Decoupled – How should Peer Review change? By www.nature.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2013 16:49:22 +0000 At this year’s SpotOn London, one of the most popular and widely tweeted sessions organised Full Article Outreach SpotOn London (#SoLo) #solo13peer
ng Innovations of targeted poverty reduction governance and policy in Zhejiang Province: Insights from China’s post-2020 anti-poverty strategy [in Chinese] By www.ifpri.org Published On :: Tue, 03 Nov 2020 5:05:01 EST Full Article
ng The impacts of COVID-19 on global food security and the coping strategy [in Chinese] By www.ifpri.org Published On :: Fri, 11 Dec 2020 5:05:01 EST Article PDF (download) Full Article
ng Nutrition and economic development: Exploring Egypt's exceptionalism and the role of food subsidies [in Chinese] By www.ifpri.org Published On :: Wed, 31 Mar 2021 5:05:01 EDT Full Article
ng 2021 Global food policy report: Transforming food systems after COVID-19: Synopsis [in Chinese] By www.ifpri.org Published On :: Sat, 03 Apr 2021 5:05:01 EDT 2020年在诸多方面都让我们始料未及。新冠肺炎(COVID-19)疫情为全球带来了一场大规模的公共卫生灾难,各国均陷入了疫情及其相关应对政策带来的不同程度的经济困境,面临服务严重中断和人员流动严重受限的局面。无论是富裕国家还是贫穷国家,均未能幸免。在中低收入国家,许多弱势群体直接面临食物安全、医疗和营养方面的威胁。丧失生计、营养不良、教育中断和资源枯竭造成的长期影响可能性非常巨大,特别是对许多国家来说,距离新冠肺炎疫情的结束还遥遥无期。此外,疫情还凸显并加剧了我们食物系统的薄弱环节和不平等状况。一年过去了,全球因新冠肺炎疫情而进一步偏离了到2030年实现可持续发展目标(SDG)的进程。显然,食物系统可以在推动我们走上正轨方面发挥核心作用。要想实现可持续发展目标,就必须对食物系统进行转型,帮助我们更好地为下一次冲击做好准备,同时造福世界贫困人口和弱势群体以及我们的地球。 Full Article
ng 2022 Global food policy report: Climate change and food systems: Synopsis [in Chinese] By www.ifpri.org Published On :: Thu, 19 May 2022 5:05:01 EDT 气候变化对全球食物系统构成的威胁日益严重,对食物和营养安全、生计及全人类整体福祉,尤其是对世界各地的贫困人口和弱势群体造成了严峻影响。我们迫切需要对气候变化采取紧急行动,既要实现限制全球变暖所需的大幅度减排,又要提高适应和应对气候变化的能力,这一点正引起全球的广泛关注。《2022全球食物政策报告》提出了一系列加快行动的机会,这些机会应在制定适应、减缓和应对气候变化的政策与投资决策时加以考虑。 Full Article
ng Global food policy report 2023: Rethinking food crisis responses: Synopsis [in Chinese] By www.ifpri.org Published On :: Fri, 14 Apr 2023 5:05:01 EDT 2022年,世界面临多重危机。旷日持久的2019冠状病毒病疫情(COVID-19)、重大自然灾害、内乱和政治动荡以及气候变化日益严重的影响对食物系统的破坏仍在继续,而与此同时,俄乌战争和通货膨胀加剧了全球粮食和化肥危机。危机数量不断增加,多种危机的叠加影响日益加剧,饥饿人口和流离失所者数量不断攀升,促使人们呼吁重新思考粮食危机应对措施,从而为变革创造了一个真正的机会。 Full Book [download] Full Article