What should you do if you knew today that a serious data breach would most likely lead to a string of public relations disasters, costing you millions, taking up 20% of the average IT staff day for two years?
We all hope it never occurs, but the amount of reported cybercrime attacks is growing steadily - if not skyrocketing - especially within the context of the modern hybrid workplace. Here are the six fundamental moves to make within the first 24 hours of experiencing a breach.
Many organizations go through great lengths to set up effective security operations incident response plans but do they test them to assess effectiveness and make continuous improvements?
There’s now a drive towards convergence which is seeing disparate technologies brought together over the SIEM to complement its threat hunting capabilities. Putting these technologies over a single platform reduces complexity and brings down management costs and eradicates duplicated functionality.
Cyber insurance providers wants policyholders to increase their cyber resilience. A thorough incident response strategy that leverages digital forensics can help enterprises ensure they have the means to protect themselves even after an attack has occurred.
With the right incident response expertise, tools, and strategy, organizations can turn seemingly disastrous events into moments for real learning, further preparation, and actionable business insight.
To many, the new SEC rules that require public companies to disclose “material” cybersecurity incidents within four days of determining their materiality may seem like a challenging, if not unreasonable, demand. Companies should put a priority on preparing incident response plans that will help them meet compliance.