As the breadth and complexity of data grows, so does a company's vulnerability. A universal data authorization standard would make retrieving and using data more accessible for those with the appropriate authorization, while safeguarding sensitive data.
Anyone dealing with critical information should pay attention to the data they handle, how they are accessing it, and where it originated. The idea is to maintain the integrity of the data and the chain of custody, which is a concept that involves the strict ownership and control over the item in question.
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.
Online businesses must prioritize credential stuffing mitigations by detecting and preventing automation in credential stuffing, and identifying compromised credentials of legitimate users and forcing them to change password to disincentivize the attackers and break the attack lifecycle.
Focusing on data quality rather than quantity means companies can drive better business outcomes, remain in compliance with privacy regulations, and prove to consumers that they respect their privacy.
Meet Bob. Bob’s an employee at BigCorp, and he’s confused. He’s got info security folks requiring him to take annual...
California’s new IoT security law requires IoT devices sold locally to be equipped with reasonable security measures. Do you know what types of devices are covered and what “reasonable security measures” entail?
As the number of machines grows to the tens of billions, security needs to catch up to this rapid growth with the intelligence and automation necessary to manage thee machine identities of these critical security assets.
Every organization needs a vulnerability management program in today’s high-risk environment. Learn how these programs work and how they prevent cyber attacks.
Cybercriminals know that a network, application process, or security control will function similarly and feature the same arrangements of hackable assets in every environment they encounter. To flip this script, security teams need to make IT environments hostile to threat actors and turn static environments into dynamic ones.










