Realizing the growing danger that insider attacks pose to businesses and national security, National Insider Threat Awareness Month has become an annual call for organizations to take preventative actions in an effort to minimize their risk of attacks.
It’s important that businesses monitor Dark Web trends and activity to monitor what data has been breached and understand where there might be weak links at the employee and enterprise level.
Have you ever wondered how exactly threat actors spend their days? A recent Huntress investigation into a machine operated by a threat actor, who had installed a Huntress agent, gave an inside look into just that.
Hackers are not only eager to take advantage of the pandemic crisis, but that are feeding off of a highly profitable supply chain. While hospitals are the target, the patient is ultimately the true victim of this cyber attack machine.
The Facebook Cambridge Analytica data scandal has garnered attention worldwide for helping to spotlight a very real problem with data privacy on the Internet. CPO Magazine will be providing ongoing coverage as we believe this to be a pivotal moment which will shape the future of how tech companies use consumer data.
By protecting machine-to-machine communication using machine identity protection, you can help stop many insider threats and a wide variety of other security threats, before they can damage your network and your company as a whole.
Two-thirds of breaches are inside jobs. Yet, insider threat programs account for less than 10% of the budget. Are enterprise cybersecurity efforts properly prioritized?
Recent Imperva survey found that nearly half of security professionals said they could implement an insider attack if they wished to. Insider threats remains one of the top cybersecurity threats to businesses.
Intelligent chatbots are growing in popularity as they can reduce potential system vulnerabilities by funneling communications through highly secure protocols.
Both countries, while accepting the EU standard contractual clauses as a compliance transfer mechanism still requires the clauses to be amended to reflect their own legal requirements. The big difference is that the Swiss requirements are very simple.










