Businesses are struggling to find the right combination of people, processes and tools to generate, consume and act upon the threat intelligence information that’s available to them.
Peacetime — before an attack occurs — is when to plan for disaster recovery and operational resilience. This is where asset dependency mapping will play a critical role in determining an organization’s ability to recover from an attack quickly and fully and emerge even stronger.
For James Howard, Chief Data Officer at KPMG, the biggest challenge today for privacy professionals is remaining relevant and adding value. How does a company remain effective in business, but also protect information in accordance with all these various regulations?
Companies are looking for new solutions to prevent, detect, and eliminate fraud. And machine learning seems to be the best answer to financial fraud. How does it work, what are the benefits, and who uses it?
Migrating to quantum resistant algorithms will take years to integrate into existing systems and processes. Organisations need to achieve crypto-agility – the ability to change, improve, and revoke cryptographic assets to successfully deal with quantum threats.
According to a research firm, Allied Market Research, the global artificial intelligence market is projected to garner $169.41 billion by 2025, registering a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 55.6% through 2025.
Passwords are becoming more of a liability than the security asset they were intended to be. Should companies consider passwordless technologies for better benefits and cost savings?
If you’re going to download freemium mobile apps, just make sure you know the true cost of paying for a product - possibly having your information compromised or your privacy violated.
While the Executive Order primarily focuses on concrete steps the federal government must take to adopt cybersecurity best practices, there are several provisions that will also significantly impact government contractors, subcontractors and other private sector entities.
Digital transformation, hybrid work, third-party partnerships, and other factors have weakened security controls. It’s now more likely than not that the adversary is already hiding within the network, and equally as likely that they got in with stolen, now compromised, credentials.










