We live in an age that values authenticity: being true to who you are and what you value. It is ironic, then, that one of the more recent innovations of the past few years—Large Language Models, or Generative AI—is in the process of undermining authenticity itself.
The SEC has been clear that proper risk management and timely cyber incident disclosures protect investors and other stakeholders. The regulators may make an example out of SolarWinds and its leadership at the time of the Orion incident to set the tone for the importance of software supply chain security.
India has enacted its long-awaited privacy legislation, the Digital Personal Data Protection Act on August 12. While there are various aspects of this Act which distinguish it from other privacy laws in the world, one that is particularly interesting is its approach towards user consent.
Security Service Edge (SSE) converges multiple cybersecurity capabilities within a single, cloud-native software stack, and is designed to protect all enterprise edges – sites, users and applications, including the IoT-connected points — even as the contours of those edges shift.
For SMBs, one breach that compromises the larger entities of their supply chain is enough to jeopardize business-critical revenue streams. With supply chain attacks an ongoing reality, now is the time for SMBs to think proactively about how to maximize the value of their security stack.
SEC's new rule for public companies to report data breaches within four days is a significant step towards transparency, cybersecurity preparedness, and standardizing reporting practices. Since news of the law broke, many security professionals have however expressed conflicting opinions.
When targeted by an Advanced Persistent Threat (APT), an organization needs to be ready to defend from a variety of different attacks coming from different directions, sometimes all at once, and sometimes over a period of time.
For IT leaders that only require a subset of Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) capabilities, preferring to focus mainly on the security aspects and leaving out the networking components, Security Service Edge (SSE), an emerging new cloud-native security framework, is potentially a better fit.
For organizations to stand a chance against cybercriminals, adopting a hacker mindset is crucial. Understanding their tactics, regularly updating skills, and proactively seeking vulnerabilities are the keys to outpacing cybercriminals.
Quantum machines will soon crack the encryption algorithms we use today to protect everything from national critical infrastructure to online banking. Europe, while a historic leader in quantum science, seems to be struggling to implement a meaningful and unified security response.










