Email Hijacking - Protect Yourself From Supply Chain Attack

The digital supply chain refers to the chain of third-party digital tools, services and infrastructure that your company depends on for a particular first-party service (such as your website or SaaS platform). In an ever-changing digital landscape, supply chains can be brittle with many unseen risks. The nature of supply chain risk is transitive; any part of the often long and complicated digital supply chain can be compromised, causing all components downstream of it to also be compromised.

Who Should Be in Charge of Supply Chain Monitoring?

If you’ve paid attention to recent cybersecurity trends, you know that monitoring your supply chain is important due to the surge in supply chain attacks. But who, exactly, is responsible for that monitoring? Traditionally, the answer has been GRC (Governance, Risk and Compliance) teams, who monitor supply chains to help protect organizations against third-party risks.

How to Elevate Cybersecurity for Financial Services Companies

The technology landscape is changing rapidly, presenting new challenges for security in the financial services sector. Generative artificial intelligence, automation, data management, and integrated finance are just some of the trends that are transforming this landscape. As the demand for personalized experiences grows, the challenges of ensuring data security and privacy are increasing, among other things, making it harder to manage digital identities.

CIS Benchmarks - What are They and How to Use Them

The CIS Benchmarks cover a collection of recommended hardening policies specifying different hosts, applications, and operating systems that include detailed recommendations on system configuration, security settings, and other measures that can help organizations safeguard their IT infrastructure against a wide range of cyber threats. The benchmarks cover various platforms and technologies such as operating systems, cloud environments, databases, web browsers, and mobile devices.

Optimizing Efficiency: How Autonomous Mobile Robotics Improves Manufacturing Processes

Manufacturing technology has continuously advanced from the early days of manual assembly lines to the present when powerful machinery reigns. However, one of the most revolutionary advancements that is changing the way products are made is the integration of autonomous mobile robotics (AMR) into production environments. Autonomous mobile robotics are designed to improve process flow by performing a variety of tasks that were once handled by humans, from transporting materials across a facility to assisting with complex assembly operations.