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Cloud Application Security: What Every Organization Needs to Know About Protecting Data in SaaS Apps

The rise of hybrid work has accelerated digital transformation for organizations of all sizes. As a result, more and more applications and data are moving to the cloud. While this has created a number of benefits — including cost savings, ease of access, and increased operational efficiencies — the cloud has also made it more challenging to protect sensitive data.

Meet Lookout SAIL: A Generative AI Tailored For Your Security Operations

Today, cybersecurity companies are in a never-ending race against cyber criminals, each seeking innovative new tactics to outpace the other. The newfound accessibility of generative artificial intelligence (gen AI) has revolutionized how people work, but it's also made threat actors more efficient. Attackers can now quickly create phishing messages or automate vulnerability discoveries.

Data Protection on the Internet: Data Leakage Prevention for ChatGPT, Bard, Generative AI, and Shadow IT

With the rise of hybrid work, data leakage has become a significant issue. Employees are now working from a variety of locations, including their homes, coffee shops, and even public libraries. This makes it more difficult to keep track of data moving between managed endpoints and your organization's SaaS applications or private apps. Shadow IT, the use of unauthorized or unapproved software and services by employees has always been a challenge for IT departments.

Lookout Announces Advanced Traffic Steering Agents to Replace Virtual Private Networks

For more than two decades, virtual private networks (VPNs) have been the go-to technology for enterprise remote access — and by extension, for enforcing remote access security. Even ubiquitous internet connections are often redirected via VPN to a central data center, where security enforcement occurs through various hardware appliances. From there, the traffic is forwarded onward to the internet. Of course, it must follow the same indirect path back on the response side.

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The Zero-Trust Journey Every Organisation Must Make

Over the past decade, the working world has undergone a dramatic transformation. Spending each day of the week in an office is no more for most, while many have the flexibility to work from any location using a device and network that the organisation often has no control over. Productivity levels have certainly increased because of the flexible working environment, but it has opened the door to new challenges, mainly protecting the organisation's critical assets.

Why Should Enterprises Care About APTs? Defend Against Chinese, Russian Cyber Espionage Hacking Groups and Other Nation-State Actors

We often think of advanced persistent threats or APTs as threats primarily targeting governments for cyber espionage, but they could have just as much impact on the private sector. Oftentimes, both the techniques and the tooling used overlap between APTs and financially-motivated cybercriminals, and some APT groups themselves have taken to moonlighting as cybercriminals for profit.

Ransomware Gangs Exploit Three Zero-Day Vulnerabilities in MOVEit

In quick succession at the end of May into mid-June, software developer Progress released three advisories that any customers using its popular managed file transfer (MFT) solution MOVEit should immediately update to the latest release. In this time, they were made aware of three critical vulnerabilities, CVE-2023-34362 on May 31, CVE-2023-35036 on June 9, and CVE-2023-35708 on June 15.

NIST 800-124 Cybersecurity Publication Revision: How to Implement Mobile Security

In today's increasingly mobile-driven world, securing our digital assets and protecting sensitive information is of paramount importance. To address this need, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) recently released the latest version of their publication, NIST 800-124 Rev. 2: Guidelines for Managing the Security of Mobile Devices in the Enterprise.

Enhancing Mobile Device Security: Applying the NIS2 Directive

Mobile devices have become indispensable in our modern lives, enabling us to stay connected, access information, and conduct transactions on the go. However, the rise of mobile usage for accessing corporate information is attracting the increased attention of cybercriminals seeking to exploit vulnerabilities and gain unauthorized access to sensitive data.

Top Mobile App Security Risks: From Risky Behavior to Hidden Malicious Code

In recent years, especially with hybrid work, almost everyone uses an iOS or Android device for work. In fact, in a recent survey, Lookout found that 92% of remote workers use their personal laptops or smartphones for work tasks, with 46% of them having saved files onto their devices. Now that employees expect to be productive from anywhere, organizations across all industries have become more relaxed with allowing the use of personal devices with bring-your-own-device (BYOD) programs.