In today’s digital privacy landscape, healthcare providers need to select an endpoint management solution that will allow their end-users to safely work with proprietary patient information without the risk of a data leak.
With much of the focus on cybersecurity practices, however, organizations are often overlooking their physical security needs. What are the common cyber-physical security threats to enterprises?
To reduce Total Cost of Fraud (TOCF), organizations must take a more holistic approach that considers the hidden costs of fraud to help minimize the cumulative financial impact and deliver better ROI for your fraud prevention efforts.
Attackers who are blocked by strong defenses in other areas, are exploiting exposures from mismanaged machine identities to exploit the trust these systems are designed for.
With an increase in legislation, the privacy landscape is a moving target for brands. Businesses are diverting precious resources away from improving personalization relevance to maintaining global privacy compliance. The two shouldn’t be working against each other.
Building security starts by arming developers with the right tools and features in order to weave best-in-class security into their applications. Businesses should leverage DevSecOps as a competitive advantage and a core component of business growth, market penetration, and scale.
Many cybersecurity issues are affecting 5G. In this article, we will be focusing on the 3 most severe ones – latency, passive eavesdropping and user impersonation.
By next year, analysts expect that over 78% of firms will choose hybrid infrastructure over alternatives, due to better control over downtime, on-prem hosting and private data centers, simpler configuration, and reduction in costs.
Why “Ransomware Insurance” Causes Healthcare Industry to Overlook Deeper, Underlying Security Issues
For the healthcare sector where 34% of all organizations were hit by ransomware last year, cyber insurance may seem like a good investment. However, this may give many organizations a false sense of security.
New quantitative study exposed what some risk managers and compliance executives have suspected: Vendors are not complying with corporate insurance requirements, representing a significant risk for their clients and partners.










