The CFIUS has broad authority to suspend, modify, or prohibit a transaction from closing in order to address national security concerns. CFIUS filings have risen in the wake of FIRRMA which widened the scope of CFIUS compliance to include certain minority investments, specifically in the field of emerging and critical technologies.
Implementing SASE is unlike rolling out any other technology. It requires dedicated coordination between security and networking teams, a streamlined security and networking architecture, and a fundamental understanding of the business goals and current processes.
Code obfuscation prevents the reverse-engineering of programs and is used to protect sensitive intellectual property (IP) such as algorithms that a company doesn’t want bad actors or competitors to see; the foremost example of this being security code.
While the wheels of digital transformation were set in motion much earlier, the pandemic accelerated their speed. It significantly impacted how organisations approach their IT ecosystem and security. Today’s landscape, with no perimeter, requires a Zero Trust approach.
Given the ongoing prevalence of advanced persistent threat (APT) attacks, organisations have every right to be wary. To prevent APT attacks, they simply need to practise basic cyber hygiene.
Microsoft appears to be erecting new barriers for partners who want to deploy Microsoft products on certain other cloud computing providers, like AWS or Google Cloud Services in proposed reform to their Partner Licensing Agreement (SPLA).
Covid highlighted the need for organizations to fully understand the world of their information and to mature their information governance program. While we are still reevaluating where we work, it is the perfect time to also reevaluate how we work.
In recent years, this has meant regulation and legal enforcement around data collection have not kept pace with the exponential growth in the tech industry. This can oftentimes lead to big consequences for individuals.
There's a common misconception that the AI label automatically makes a cybersecurity solution better when that's far from the truth. Organizations don't need AI or ML tools to improve cybersecurity.
Defending organizations utilize AI-powered email security measures to enhance network protection, detect advanced malware and ransomware, optimize critical data center processes, improve threat response times, and reduce human error. Unfortunately, threat actors have also identified the benefits of AI technology.










