If attackers want a way into your company, they usually start with email. It’s where invoices arrive, passwords get reset, and “urgent” messages from the CEO land in people’s inboxes. One wrong click can move money, leak data, or hand over access to your entire environment.
In the modern landscape of global commerce, the way we handle our resources has shifted from physical vaults to invisible streams of data. For those of us navigating this world, the convenience is undeniable.
Daily life becomes challenging as people grow older. Health problems, loss of mobility, and loneliness are common features of life in older age.
In enterprise settings, web browser apps used to be treated as a commodity, a tool that employees selected on their own and security teams hardened after the fact.
On August 13, 2024, NIST stamped its first three post-quantum cryptography standards into U.S. policy—an "important first step," the White House said. Overnight the "quantum-safe" badge splashed across start-up datasheets, chip roadmaps, and cloud portals, flooding buyers with hype.
When a company refreshes its tech, the excitement usually centers on the shiny new servers or the lightning-fast laptops arriving at the loading dock.
Serious injuries and long-term disabilities affect a large number of people in Pittsburgh and across Pennsylvania.
When guests ask me about Komodo liveaboard diving and snorkeling differences, they’re usually trying to solve a real planning problem: “Should I invest my time, energy, and budget into a dive-focused trip, a snorkeling-focused trip, or a mix, and where does Bali fit if I’m starting there?”
Keeping your attack surfaces under control is all about safeguarding the avenues through which adversaries can gain unauthorized access to information technology systems.
When small and mid-sized businesses think about cybersecurity, they tend to focus on what they can see. Endpoint protection. Email security. Multi-factor authentication. Compliance frameworks. Staff training.










