All advice, guidance and publications Title TypeAdviceGuidancePublication AudienceIndividuals & familiesSmall & medium businessesOrganisations & Critical InfrastructureGovernment Sort by Sort byDate updated (new to old)Date updated (old to new)Title (A-Z)Title (Z-A) Items per page 61218243036424854606672788490200 06 Oct 2021 Publication Industrial control systems: Remote access protocol External parties may need to connect remotely to critical infrastructure control networks. This access is to allow the manufacturers of equipment used in Australia’s critical infrastructure the ability to maintain the equipment, when a fault is experienced that cannot be fixed in the required timeframe any other method. 06 Oct 2021 Publication Introduction to Cross Domain Solutions This publication introduces technical and non-technical audiences to the concept of a Cross Domain Solution (CDS), a type of security capability that is used to connect discrete systems within separate security domains in an assured manner. 06 Oct 2021 Publication Malicious email mitigation strategies Socially engineered emails containing malicious attachments and embedded links are routinely used in targeted cyber intrusions against organisations. This publication has been developed to provide mitigation strategies for the security risks posed by these malicious emails. 06 Oct 2021 Publication Managed service providers: How to manage risk to customer networks There are several mitigation strategies that managed service providers can implement to protect their own networks and manage the security risks posed to their customers’ networks. 06 Oct 2021 Publication Marketing and filtering email service providers This publication provides high level guidance on how to use email service providers (ESPs) in particular deployment scenarios. The considerations and controls described in that publication also apply to ESPs sending email on other organisations’ behalf. 06 Oct 2021 Publication Protecting against business email compromise Business email compromise is when malicious actors use email to abuse trust in business processes to scam organisations out of money or goods. Malicious actors can impersonate business representatives using similar names, domains or fraudulent logos as a legitimate organisation or by using compromised email accounts and pretending to be a trusted co-worker. Pagination Previous page ‹‹ Page 39 Next page ›› View other content topics Alerts and Advisories Advice, guidance and publications Reports and statistics News Programs Glossary