Classic anonymization is difficult to achieve and often does not provide good results. Comparatively, modern technologies like Diffix offer the best of both worlds, giving you data treasure and data protection.
There is still a gap between the need and resources available to solve the cybersecurity problem. Training the existing workforce solves part of the problem, but long term, the solution lies with the younger generation.
As regulators get more serious about enforcing data protection rules, the severity of penalties issued against enterprises who fail to secure their customer data continues to grow and there's higher demand for better executive accountability as seen in the recent cases of Uber and Drizly.
Upgrading to the “latest and greatest” technology isn’t always feasible for businesses, given the cost and disruption involved in constantly changing processes and switching solutions. So how can today’s organizations better understand when it makes sense to upgrade—and when it doesn’t?
With cybersecurity professionals spending as much as 30% of their time chasing down groundless reports of risky behavior or unauthorized data access, false positives are becoming a big problem for many organizations.
FEMA has acknowledged a “major privacy incident” where nearly 2.5 million U.S. disaster survivors had their personal information shared with a third-party contractor responsible for setting up temporary housing.
Uncertainty around how data is misused and soled without consent has prompted consumers to question how their data is being collected, used and protected. How can we create a more positive consent experience?
Since the signing of Executive Order 14028, the Biden-Harris administration has announced several cybersecurity initiatives. Organizations should prepare for heightened scrutiny from multiple government agencies over their organizational cybersecurity standards and incident responses.
Only one third of respondents to a recent survey include business-critical systems, like SAP, in cybersecurity monitoring. And one third of those who do include SAP in security monitoring do not review SAP logs for potential cyber threats.
Open source software components are useful for software development yet vulnerable to attacks due to its openness. What are some of the best security practices in managing them?










