Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

The latest News and Information on Insider Threats including employee monitoring and data privacy.

Cyber Security Trends in the Energy Sector

Each day, we depend on energy for almost every kind of activity imaginable. Energy is required to keep lights on, enable transportation around the world, allow hospitals to operate, power the internet, and much more. Also termed the Oil and Gas sector, it’s considered a critical infrastructure sector by most nations around the world. This is because a loss of energy can cause a debilitating impact on the quality of human life.

Protecting against the perils of dental patient data breaches

This pattern of data breaches is very concerning for dental practices, which are charged with protecting people’s most sensitive information. What can practices do to protect themselves against this growing problem? There has been a surge in data breaches at companies from virtually every sector during the past few years. Practically every week, the news media reports new breaches that seem to be increasing in scope and severity.

The GDPR, CCPA-Friendly Approach To Employer Monitoring: What You To Know For Compliance In 2020

The past several years have been marked by numerous high-profile data breaches that seem to be happening with increasing frequency and scope. Given the unprecedented participation in digital platforms and the unparalleled amount of personal data that today’s tech companies store, government regulation and oversight felt inevitable.

Escaping the Egregious Eleven - Part One

Helping to define and examine the top perceived cloud security threats of the day, the ‘Egregious Eleven’ is the most recent iteration in an evolving set of summary reports published by the Cloud Security Alliance (CSA). It follows on from the ‘Treacherous Twelve,’ which they defined for us in 2016, and the ‘Notorious Nine,’ which they presented in 2013.

Fraud Prevention with User Behavior Analytics

Data is currency online and on the dark web where social security numbers sell for $1 each, debit or credit card numbers as much as $110, and passports and medical records $1,000 or more. Without deep visibility into user activity within an organization, suspicious behaviors that signal fraud may go unnoticed and insiders can profit by selling your sensitive data.