WinMagic Inc. develops full-disk encryption software. Its SecureDoc line of products ensures protection of sensitive information stored on desktops and laptops by employing authentication from password to hardware token, biometrics, and PKI commencing right at pre-boot time.
Browsing: Data Protection
Egress Software Technologies is the leading provider of email and file encryption services and software to the Public Sector and small, mid size, and enterprise commercial organisations.
WatchGuard builds affordable, all-in-one network and content security solutions to provide defense in depth for corporate content, networks and the businesses they power.
Websense, Inc. is a global leader in protecting organizations from the latest cyberattacks and data theft. Websense® TRITON™ comprehensive security solutions unify web security, email security, mobile security and data loss prevention (DLP) at the lowest total cost of ownership.
Security-conscious enterprises and government agencies turn to Vormetric for protection against both insider threats and the new breed of cyber threats, such as Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) attacks – across their physical, virtual and cloud environments.
Proofpoint, Inc. helps the most successful companies in the world protect and govern their most sensitive business data.
Dropbox has recently revised its claims on how securely they maintain user data, prompting a lawsuit claiming that Dropbox has misled its customers about its privacy policy and encryption processes.
On June 6, 2013, a group of 300 gathered in Santa Marta, Colombia, the second oldest city in South America, for the First Latin America Congress on Data Protection.
More malware is appearing on mobile devices themselves, and despite security measures such as full-device encryption, they can steal information regardless of the roadblocks that businesses put in their way, according to V-Key CTO Joseph Gan.
In his Opinion on the EC’s proposed legal framework for Europol, the European Data Protection Supervisor states that strong data protection principles – of the sort that would prevent the UK’s Communications Data Bill – would improve rather than weaken law enforcement.