Advancements such as Infrastructure as Code, DevSecOps and Security as Code are making a difference in the world where the most life-critical organizations release new code hourly.
No two organizations have the same journey when implementing Privacy by Design, what will be the most rewarding and least disruptive approach to execute it for your business?
Ransomware attacks have been a highlight of mainstream media. By taking a preventative approach, businesses can deploy a combination of education, processes, hardware and software to detect, combat and recover from attacks if they were to arise.
When conducting penetration tests, regardless of an organization’s size or maturity, certain kinds of attacks recur so regularly that security teams should develop standardized practices to defend against them. Here are some suggested strategies for conducting detection and mitigation.
Myths about an SBOM further exposing an organization to attack or leaking trade secrets hamper an enterprise’s security efforts around visibility and transparency into software assets that could put an entire organization at risk.
Data privacy management will only grow more important, expensive, and complicated in the days to come for tech companies. Companies need to take a step back and understand what data they have, where it resides and how to manage that data.
Tech lobbyists working to introduce new amendments and changes to the upcoming CCPA privacy law which could significantly limit the effectiveness of the regulation.
Companies should have an automated, accurate and scalable technology solution to handle a potential mountain of Subject Rights Requests (SRRs) when CCPA comes into effect.
By providing hosted services to businesses, telcos will need to consider privilege access management to secure not only their own infrastructure, but also that of their clients.
With so many employees, subscribers, and seemingly unlimited data out there, the telecom industry is a prime target for cybercriminals looking for a profit.










