The future of data is not about how much we collect, but how ethically it is used and how we can realistically safeguard it so that we get the best out of AI without violating data privacy tenets.
With the pandemic accelerating digital transformation, there has also been a surge in fraudulent activity as threat actors are exploiting newly remote operations. In today’s digital world, knowing your customer is more critical than ever before.
Fraud is becoming more personalized. The risks of not prioritizing identity verification for fraud prevention are significant — damaged brand reputation and consumer trust, compliance-related fines and significant financial repercussions.
The true essence of Zero Trust lies in embracing a process-centric approach rather than relying solely on products. CISA has established a set of maturity pillars that guide organizations in their journey toward zero trust. Understanding these pillars is essential for CISOs and CPOs looking to build a robust security framework.
With increasing privacy regulations, how exactly can organizations prepare for the looming privacy-driven era of digital advertising? It starts with baking privacy and transparency into all facets of operations.
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.
Third-party systems form a critical component of customer experience in current digital marketplace. Companies should be aware of third party risks at all times while reaping the benefits of the increased integration.
Today, crime data is heavily used in security and police work to cut down on criminal activity instead of simply reacting to crime. Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) technology is getting better and using data correctly can help police forces get better.
Amid great number of existing frameworks in the area of risk management, compliance, privacy and security, new are still drafted and existing ones updated and refined. This is first and for all for big and global companies on which there is most pressure to stay compliant and ethical in whatever they do or intend to do.
Hackers are reverse engineering mobile apps and embedding malicious code to steal data for downstream attacks or to cause other direct harm to the user.










