The European Commission has released its proposal for a comprehensive framework of cybersecurity requirements for products with digital elements in the EU – the EU Cyber Resilience Act. This is an important step towards a more robust harmonized set of cybersecurity rules.
Easy targets. That’s the best way to describe universities and colleges as targets of cyberattacks. Most still operate using legacy systems and infrastructure, and many users, devices, and inadequate cybersecurity policies make them easy prey for bad actors.
Dealing with web supply chain attacks requires an in-depth look at third-party code usage. Third-party code is embedded in the core fabric of web development and is still one of the most valuable assets for competitive product development.
Surge in ransomware attacks and the complex cybersecurity landscape – complicated by the growing adoption of remote work – are giving cyber insurance companies leverage to hike premiums at alarming rates. Here are three strategies to help you find keep costs affordable and get approved for coverage you need.
When industrial environments integrated connected systems into their assets, attack surfaces are expanded, opening once-closed critical infrastructure sites and the companies that manage them to attacks from threat actors.
Privacy-enhancing technologies, like homomorphic encryption, AI-generated synthetic data, and federated learning support privacy enhancing processes and can help meet data protection challenges.
When the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) takes effect and replaces the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) on January 1, 2023, businesses will have new privacy obligations with respect to personal information of employees, applicants for employment, independent contractors, owners, directors, officers, and their beneficiaries and emergency contacts who are California residents.
Human error accounts for the vast majority of security breaches largely due to successful phishing campaigns. Here are tips on fortifying the human firewall via the Fogg model of behavior design.
With consumer awareness of privacy at an all time high, there is not only regulatory risk, but also reputational and brand risk for those CMOs who drop the ball – an increasingly likely occurrence as the changes to the familiar status quo mount.
Three common problems regularly hold back cybersecurity strategies – not testing enough, not resolving or disclosing known vulnerabilities, and not having proper security programs in place to measure testing effectiveness.










