Cyber Kill Chain: Difference between revisions
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In 2011, Lockheed Martin released a paper defining a Cyber Kill Chain that was similar in concept to the U.S. military’s model.<ref>[https://www.sans.org/blog/applying-security-awareness-to-the-cyber-kill-chain/ Applying Security Awareness to the Kill Chain, Sans blog]</ref> Since then, organizations and companies have released various versions, including AT&T's "Internal Cyber Kill Chain Model"<ref>[https://cybersecurity.att.com/blogs/security-essentials/the-internal-cyber-kill-chain-model Security Essentials, Cybersecurity blog, AT&T]</ref> and Paul Pols' "Unified Kill Chain."<ref>[https://unifiedkillchain.com/ Unified Kill Chain]</ref> | In 2011, Lockheed Martin released a paper defining a Cyber Kill Chain that was similar in concept to the U.S. military’s model.<ref>[https://www.sans.org/blog/applying-security-awareness-to-the-cyber-kill-chain/ Applying Security Awareness to the Kill Chain, Sans blog]</ref> Since then, organizations and companies have released various versions, including AT&T's "Internal Cyber Kill Chain Model"<ref>[https://cybersecurity.att.com/blogs/security-essentials/the-internal-cyber-kill-chain-model Security Essentials, Cybersecurity blog, AT&T]</ref> and Paul Pols' "Unified Kill Chain."<ref>[https://unifiedkillchain.com/ Unified Kill Chain]</ref> | ||
==References== | == References == | ||
{{reflist}} | |||
[[Category:DNS Abuse Responses]] | [[Category:DNS Abuse Responses]] | ||
[[Category:Glossary]] | [[Category:Glossary]] | ||