Monitoring for Law Firms: Data Security & Ethics Guide

Law firms don’t monitor employees because they’re “worried about productivity.” They monitor because one mistake can expose privileged matter files, trigger breach notifications, derail litigation strategy, and permanently damage client trust, especially in a hybrid work model. External attackers are still a threat.

Why Hospitals Pay Ransom to Hackers

Targets in western countries are picked with care, since hospitals and critical services face lives at risk and heavy legal fallout after breaches. When attackers weigh up ransom against long court battles and recovery costs, payment becomes the path many victims choose, feeding the growth of cybercrime. ⸻ For more information about us or if you have any questions you would like us to discuss email podcast@razorthorn.com. We give our clients a personalised, integrated approach to information security, driven by our belief in quality and discretion..

Remote work security: the complete guide to securing the digital workspace

Remote work security depends on protecting identities, devices, and data across distributed environments. Organizations must secure home networks, encrypt endpoints, enforce strong authentication, and reduce credential risk. Applying Zero Trust principles, limiting standing privileges, monitoring endpoint activity, and maintaining visibility into access and data movement helps reduce attack surface, contain threats faster, and support compliance in remote and hybrid work models.

Why Network Security Blind Spots Persist and How Behavior Monitoring Fixes Them

You are counting on lots of security measures to keep your network safe. The truth is that these measures can still have secret passages that bad people can use to sneak around without being noticed. You can have things like firewalls and special software, on your computers to watch for problems and still not catch people moving around inside your network taking data slowly or doing weird things that are not supposed to happen because these things do not always look like the problems you are expecting.

Public Wi-Fi vs Secure Mobile Data: What Remote Workers Need to Know

You can work from almost anywhere today, cafés, airports, hotels, even park benches. Free public Wi-Fi makes it easy to jump online fast. But is it really safe? Many remote workers don't think about security until something goes wrong. One weak network can expose emails, client files, passwords, and payment details in minutes. On the other hand, secure mobile data offers more control and privacy-but may cost more. So which option should you trust with your work? In this guide, we'll break down the real risks, clear up common myths, and help you choose the safest connection for your remote setup.