Eighty percent of C-level executives and IT security professionals believe that cyber attacks pose a greater risk to their nation than physical attacks, while 51 percent believe a cyber attacker is currently in their corporate network, or has been in the past year.
Author: ISBuzz Team
“How GCHQ watches your every move” is the Guardian’s front page headline.
Senator Patrick Leahy, along with other US senators, has introduced a bill to limit the National Security Agency (NSA) spying on domestic targets.
Apple’s success in recent years has largely been due to its ability to design and create products that appeal to wide variety of users, from tech enthusiasts to mainstream consumers to business users.
Elusive whistleblower, Ed Snowden is still out there and he seems to be involved in a worldwide cat and mouse chase with Barack Obama and the US authorities.
Despite a high level of headline-grabbing hacks and the fact that criminal hackers run huge markets of information for sale upon request, most businesses whose confidential information has been hijacked don’t realize how much damage can be caused.
Mobile users have admitted to being less aware of threats than they are on PCs.
Next Friday, June 28, marks the launch of Quantum Dawn 2.
I’ve been at this IT thing for 35 years, and I’ve yet to find an explanation why security should trump convenience that has any appeal to those who lose the convenience. Does this sound familiar?
A recent survey shows that even before PRISM news broke, six out of ten consumers were concerned about the security of storing their content in social networking and cloud storage services.