In addition to five new state privacy laws, 2024 is expected to bring not only an amplified number of cyberattacks but also increasingly sophisticated attacks, including using emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), in what is a quickly and continuously evolving threat landscape.
Consumers want to be targeted with ads tailored to their needs and desires but are also more aware of their own privacy and the misuse of personal data. Businesses need to understand how to balance personalization and privacy by implementing strategies that allow for secure multi-party analytics.
File-based malware has long been among the most effective attack vectors employed by threat actors worldwide. While AI-powered detection technologies are coming to market to help address these growing risks, their outputs should be complemented by deterministic controls and human oversight, particularly in high-consequence environments.
With the recent major GDPR cases on Facebook and Google, DPOs at smaller companies are getting worried and challenged in ensuring terms and conditions and privacy notices are not mixed up.
Devaluing data makes the information meaningless to bad actors regardless of how much data and which type of data is exfiltrated. This strategy prevents fraudsters from holding your data hostage during ransomware attacks — even if bad actors bypass your security measures, they can’t sell or expose the information.
No one would argue that 2018 was a turbulent year for cybercrime and identity theft, and there’s no doubt that we’ll continue to outpace this volume and velocity. How can organizations empower themselves – and their employees – to protect sensitive personal and company data?
This article is based on a presentation made by Steven Klimt, a partner in the Sydney office of Clayton Utz during the Data Privacy Asia 2016 conference held on 9-11 November 2016. It outlines the new mandatory data breach reporting legislation, how Australian privacy regulation impacts Big Data and the differences between Australian Privacy legislation and the proposed EU GDPR.
Society is finally starting to wake up to the immense privacy implications of real-time facial recognition surveillance as seen in the latest developments in San Francisco, London and the White House.
Remote workers executing their tasks through both company-issue and personal devices have become a new normal. What are the nine security hacks that can keep them from being vulnerable?
In today’s cyber security environment, organizations always strive for getting the best return on investment when shopping for cyber insurance. Companies desire low-cost policies without accurately assessing risk. Insurers want low risk and to cover as little as possible. How did we get here and where do we go?










