Microsoft President Brad Smith explores the evolution of cyber threats in new book update

Does SolarWinds drama translate into a compelling read?

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

What you need to know

What you need to know

If you’re in need of reading material and want an insight into what passes through the minds of those running Microsoft, the company’s president Brad Smith has an updated version of his book “Tools and Weapons: The Promise and the Peril of the Digital Age” making the rounds which, on top of its original content, now offers a look inside how the company viewed the SolarWinds attacks (viaGeekWire). These attacks paved the way for a 2021 rich with SolarWinds andMicrosoft Exchange servernews, most of it negative in nature, relating to vulnerabilities, compromised entities, and general chaos.

“It’s impossible to avoid the grave conclusion that the sharing of cybersecurity threat intelligence today is even more challenged than it was for terrorist threats before 9/11,” Smith writes in his book alongside co-author Carol Ann Browne, linking the struggles of a pre and post 9/11 world to that of the one that allowed for theSolarWinds situationto occur.

Lots of details about Microsoft’s actions in response to the SolarWinds threat are found in the book, including interesting tidbits like how monitoring and managing the situation became the full-time job of over 500 employees at one point in the threat’s lifecycle.Amazon Web Servicesis also namedropped, being directly linked as one of the services used by attackers for hosting their command-and-control servers.

Heavy reading

Brad Smith’s and Carol Ann Browne’s book gives an overview of the modern technological landscape and helps readers expand their knowledge of the threats individuals, companies, and countries face in a world where the cyber front is everything.

Get the Windows Central Newsletter

Get the Windows Central Newsletter

All the latest news, reviews, and guides for Windows and Xbox diehards.

Robert Carnevale is the News Editor for Windows Central. He’s a big fan of Kinect (it lives on in his heart), Sonic the Hedgehog, and the legendary intersection of those two titans, Sonic Free Riders. He is the author ofCold War 2395. Have a useful tip? Send it to robert.carnevale@futurenet.com.