When industrial environments integrated connected systems into their assets, attack surfaces are expanded, opening once-closed critical infrastructure sites and the companies that manage them to attacks from threat actors.
5G networks provide lots of benefits and also unknown security risks. Organizations need to change their threat models to increase visibility, security awareness and control of the endpoints.
As government agencies and critical infrastructure sectors increasingly adopt Internet of Things (IoT) devices to enhance operational efficiency, they inadvertently expand their attack surfaces. Proliferation of wireless technologies introduces significant new vulnerabilities.
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?
The time is now for business leaders to implement zero-trust protocols to address cloud misconfigurations beyond the identity layer and into the SaaS app ecosystem, as doing so has become critical for organizations to be able to maintain a good security posture. Zero Trust Data Access (ZTDA) does just that.
Technology should provide us with the tools we need to feel in control of our personal data, not the opposite. Is there any technology available that can actually stop the companies from making money out of our data?
The Middle East & Africa (MEA) region is currently on the verge of immense digital transformation and disruption fuelled by government spending and rapid technology adoption.
To prevent compromises in supply chains, companies need to solidify the importance of managing third party risk, institute continuous monitoring solutions and improve the resilience of their suppliers and systems.
Entire populations are being manipulated through increasingly prevalent and hyper-compelling information typically spread via social media, designed to invoke emotion and exploit known biases and provoke a tsunami of misinformation.
We must advance our understanding and catch up to hackers by proclaiming that the security perimeter, as we knew it, no longer exists. When proof of identity is all we need to access our most sensitive, critical data, then the security perimeter is each and every one of us.










