AI can become a transformative force in meeting today’s compliance and security needs for GRC teams, provided organizations create a happy path that ensures data isn’t leaked and empowers developers to use AI safely.
As consumers demand greater corporate responsibility for their personal information, business and technology leaders face an ever-expanding list of challenges pertaining to cybersecurity and privacy of customer data.
By now, the Social Credit System that the Republic of China has been planning to implement since 2014 is known about across the globe. If you think the Western world is miles apart from taking measures even remotely similar to the SCC in China, then you’re dead wrong.
The role of the CISO has evolved dramatically over the past decade. What was once a function centered on technical controls and perimeter defense has become a leadership position at the crossroads of business strategy, risk management and enterprise resilience.
While SaaS increases business efficiency, it also represents a significant challenge for CISOs, who now have less direct control over their organizations’ data, including business information, proprietary information, and even employee data, that is now overwhelmingly in various SaaS systems.
While roughly half of all businesses are using some type of monitoring tool to detect insider threats, the truth is that none of the most commonly deployed solutions can entirely prevent leaks of sensitive documents.
When the US Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, it immediately increased the importance of protecting medical data privacy for a wide range of healthcare-related businesses, How are governments and businesses responding and what are the steps that CPOs can take?
As the world becomes more digitally integrated, hacker groups will continue to take advantage of the physical blindspot that many companies have to launch attacks against digital infrastructure. A cyberthreat that comes by way of a physical device is known as a “phygital” threat.
Recent major data breaches and fines show that companies cannot delay a good cyber defense plan any longer. How should cybersecurity leaders effectively communicate and position security risks to their C-suite?
Growing gap in cybersecurity workforce can be addressed by tapping into real-time information and threat intelligence from SOC analysts and security teams around the world.










