A curated collection of periodic cybersecurity newsletters covering news, research, tools, vulnerabilities, and threat analysis.
Awesome Cyber Security Newsletters is a curated GitHub repository that aggregates specialized cybersecurity newsletters covering the latest news, research, tools, vulnerabilities, and threat analysis. It solves the problem of information fragmentation by providing a centralized directory for security professionals to discover and subscribe to relevant periodic updates. The collection spans niche domains like AI security, cloud security, API security, and digital forensics.
Cybersecurity professionals, threat researchers, IT security teams, and enthusiasts who need to stay updated on industry trends, vulnerabilities, and best practices through curated periodic content.
It saves time by eliminating the need to manually search for quality newsletters, offers expert-vetted sources across specialized domains, and provides a comprehensive, community-maintained resource that is regularly updated with new and relevant publications.
Periodic cyber security newsletters that capture the latest news, summaries of conference talks, research, best practices, tools, events, vulnerabilities, and analysis of trending threats and attacks
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Covers specific domains like AI security, cloud security, and digital forensics with dedicated newsletters, reducing information overload as highlighted in the README's niche coverage section.
Newsletters are handpicked by recognized practitioners such as Marco Lancini for cloud security and Peter Kacherginsky for blockchain threats, ensuring curated quality sources.
Includes delivery via email, LinkedIn groups, and Telegram channels, offering flexible consumption methods as noted in the key features for diverse formats.
Aggregates newsletters on news, research, tools, vulnerabilities, and threat analysis, providing a broad scope that spans from conference summaries to best practices.
Newsletters are delivered on schedules (e.g., weekly or monthly), making them unsuitable for real-time security monitoring or immediate threat response, unlike live feeds or alerts.
As a static GitHub repository, it relies on the maintainer for updates; newsletters may change, shut down, or become outdated without prompt reflection, lacking automated quality checks.
No built-in search, filtering, or personalization options; users must manually browse the list and manage subscriptions externally, which can be cumbersome for large teams.