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.
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.
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.
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?
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.
President Biden’s Executive Order includes a provision that would require software vendors selling to the federal government to maintain a Software Bill of Materials (SBOM). Unfortunately, it’s not that simple.
Today's cybersecurity teams can’t get ahead of hackers because they’re drowning in data, fatigued by alerts, and dissatisfied with their jobs. Data elitism is the root cause of this negative environment, but companies can take steps to offset it.
How can well-intentioned companies avoid employing dark patterns by mistake? And how can privacy professionals, particularly attorneys, effectively counsel their clients away from this common, yet all too prevalent, practice?
A trusted cybersecurity advisor is the gateway to a security-first mindset within a business -- you just need to know where to start and what to look for before engaging with such services.
Many businesses are still struggling to understand and comply with data protection laws and regulations. Study finds that 62.4% of companies are still not ‘completely compliant’ with data regulations which means vulnerable consumers.










