b'216-393-2484BROAD BAND by Claire L. Evans In tech, there are stories we hear all too often: a major company got hacked, Meta dealing with yet another lawsuit or Google implementing some new security measure. However, theres one story we dont hear enough: pioneering women in tech. Much like Hidden Figures and The Rise of the Rocket Girls, Broad Band by Claire L. Evans uncovers the pivotal yet overlooked contributions of female pioneers who shaped the Internet. EvansHackers Are Targeting vividly narrates the achievements of visionaries like Grace HopperSmall Construction and Elizabeth Jake Feinler, showcasing their revolutionaryCompanies And Other work in computing and online networks. Evans sheds light onInvoice-Heavy Businessesthese hidden figures, inspiring a new generation to recognize and celebrate the women behind technologicalFrom 2023 to 2024, attacks on constructionThey deal with a lot of suppliers and vendors. advancements. Broad Band is an essential,companies doubled, making up 6% of Krolls totalConstruction companies work with many enlightening read that helps redefine the trueincident response cases, according to the 2024suppliers and vendors, and each vendor can history of technology. Cyber Threat Landscape report from risk-advisorybe a weak spot that hackers can exploit. For firm Kroll. Experts at Kroll note that the uptickexample, if a hacker gets control of a vendors September 2024 could be driven by how work is carried out in thee-mail, they can send fake invoices that look industry: employees work with numerous vendors,real, tricking businesses into sending money to work remotely via mobile devices and operate inthe hackers account instead. Multiply that by high-pressure environments where urgency canthe number of vendors you work with, and thats This monthlysometimes trump security protocols. All of thesea lot of potential entry points forahacker.publicationfactors make the construction industry ripe forThey use frequent mobile sign-ins. As truly provided courtesyacyber-attack. remote workers, construction employees rely on mobile devices to sign into accounts and of Trent Milliron,Ripe For Hackerscommunicate from anywhere. This mobile CEO of Kloud9 IT. Business e-mail compromise (BEC)fake e-mailsaccessibility, while convenient, also increases designed to trick employees into giving awaythe risk because mobile devices are typically money or sensitive informationmade up 76% ofless secure than desktops or laptops.attacks on construction companies, according toThey work in a high-stakes, high-pressure Kroll. These e-mails look like document-signingenvironment. In industries where delays can "Do It Right Theplatforms or invoices to socially engineer usersbe costly, such as construction or health care, FirstTime" into giving away information. or approve transactions without thoroughly employees may rush to process invoices These tactics are having a higher success rate in smaller construction companies for a few reasons: Continued on Page 2 .Technology That Works!216-393-24841'