Companies globally are facing a shortage in cybersecurity talent that could be managed through training with the four Es, i.e. education, efficiency, embracing and engagement, in mind.
The FTC is a shadow regulator on cyber, and it is impacting what businesses must do about cybersecurity. Most troublingly, it is doing so without clear standards and in apparent self-denial. This may have wide-ranging ramifications for the future of self-driving cars.
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.
With the growing threat of cyber attacks, businesses are placing more of an emphasis on cybersecurity planning within their executive teams, integrating holistic incident response plans, and embracing new technology.
With GDPR making headway in regulating data privacy at an international level, many U.S. states are following suit to pass their own laws and bills to protect consumer’s personal data.
The GDPR has influenced the future of corporate compliance at a global level. As we see the CCPA, the USCDPA, and bills in other jurisdictions like India and Brazil being passed, it is evident that all companies soon will be required to comply with some consumer data privacy measure.
Changing attitudes, new and evolving regulations and the demise of third-party cookies have shifted traditional marketing practices towards zero party data as the favored solution.
The EU GDPR signals a move towards a technology-based approach that can enforce data protection policies for personal data. What’s the solution?
In a recent analysis of the companies that make up the Global 2000, nearly three quarters implemented less than half of all domain security measures. As attacks targeting domains continue to rise, it is critical to determine who is responsible for overseeing their security and the processes they implement.
Users are likely to feel uneasy about the extent of information a single superapp brand could possess regarding their individual preferences, raising real concerns about privacy and data control, which in turn could affect app uptake.










