To put an end to the loss of valuable ad dollars, cybersecurity and risk management professionals must realize that ad fraud is not caught with traditional cybersecurity tools.
Cyber risk has become a barometer for corporate resilience and trust. As the landscape accelerates, boards are expanding how they engage with performance, talent, and technical insight to keep pace with rising expectations. In today’s environment, traditional rhythms are giving way to more dynamic approaches that reflect the speed of change.
GDPR and the growth in big data analytics brought a new awareness of cyber security to the real estate industry. How should the businesses stay in compliance while growing on innovation?
For fraud and AML leaders, the solution isn’t choosing between technology and people, but rather empowering teams with the right technology. AI agents are the key to this transformation with the ability to supercharge fraud and AML teams across end-to-end workflows with human-in-the-loop control.
For years, many organizations treated cybersecurity training as a mere compliance requirement. But today’s executive teams are taking a radically different approach. They're recasting cyber-readiness from a perfunctory task into a strategic lever for business resilience and growth.
In today’s threat landscape, security professionals aren’t short on signals. Rather, they’re drowning in them. From endpoint telemetry to user activity to cloud platform events, we’re collecting more indicators than ever before. Despite the volume of alerts, or perhaps because of them, organizations still struggle to detect threats early and accurately.
While proposed amendments to narrow the scope of the CCPA might tempt financial services organizations to put CCPA compliance on the backburner, that instinct might prove to be flawed for quite a few reasons.
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.
Security incidents happen; that’s just reality. But how a company decides to handle an event says more about their values and priorities than their product. The recent Okta compromise reminds us of the damage inflicted when there is a lack of transparency between a security vendor and its customers.
Today there's a big difference between safety and security. But in the coming era of autonomous vehicles, there will be no difference between the two as electronic security becomes more important.










