Juan Andrés Guerrero-Saade discusses the perils and ethical conundrums that arise as the industry enters a new playing field.
  
Many security researchers have been part of the security community for long enough to remember the days when the typical adversary was a 17-year-old teenager operating from their bedroom. These days, however, some of the adversaries faced by many researchers and companies are powerful and resourceful nation states and intelligence agencies.
    In a paper he presented at VB2015 in Prague, “The ethics and perils of APT research: an unexpected transition into intelligence brokerage”,
    
     Kaspersky Lab
    
    researcher Juan Andrés Guerrero-Saade explains that the change in typical adversary has consequences that go far beyond the fact that the malware is a little more advanced, and
    
     OPSEC
    
    matters a bit more. In fact, we have entered a whole new playing field that we have barely begun to understand.
     You can read the paper
     
      here
     
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       Are you interested in presenting your research at the upcoming Virus Bulletin conference (VB2016), in Denver 5-7 October 2016? The
       
        call for papers
       
       is now open.
        Posted on 21 January 2016 by
        
         Martijn Grooten
        
       
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