Organizations scramble to leverage big data to gain business insight for more accurate & efficient marketing, sales, operational activities and more. But many also now apply these tools to discover anomalous behavior and expose fraudulent activity. Join our expert panel from Zions Bancorp and LexisNexis for new...
This white paper provides a cutting-edge view on why large organizations can no longer rely on preventive security systems, point-security tools, manual processes and hardened configurations to protect them from targeted attacks and advanced malware. Henceforth, security management must be based upon continuous...
Today's spear-phishing campaigns are localized, small and can slip through typical spam filters. As a result, detection practices have to evolve, says researcher Gary Warner of the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
The future of security lies in using data for behavioral analysis of both people and systems. How else do we determine what's normal from what's not? To do so, security teams must apply big data solutions and thinking to level the playing field between attacker and defender.
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What are the common mistakes individuals in organizations make when it comes to data security and breaches? Craig Spiezle of the Online Trust Alliance provides insight from the latest research.
Understanding big data is not the problem, say Michael Fowkes and Aaron Caldiero of Zions Bank. Figuring out how to use the information contained within big data in a meaningful way - that's the trick.
Want to know how predictive analysis could work to defend your IT systems? Take a look at how American Navy SEALS found Osama bin Laden, says Booz Allen Hamilton's Christopher Ling.
Solutionary is out with its 2013 Global Threat Intelligence Report. What are the top four threats to organizations, and how can they be mitigated? Security strategist Don Gray offers insights and tips.
Despite ever-evolving cybersecurity threats, David Knight of Proofpoint says spear phishing attacks are really the greatest worries for most security and risk officers.
Data security used to be about building firewalls and protections around the data. Now it's about securing the data itself. That's why data is the new perimeter, says Charlie Pulfer of Titus.
Most organizations have more data than they know what to do with, much less understand how they can use that data in a meaningful way, say NopSec's Lisa Xu and Steven Leonard. Having the ability to aggregate that data is key.
Most organizations are challenged by having too much information in too many places. But Dieter Schuller of Radiant Logic says centralizing data can improve identity management.
Russ Dietz of Websense likes to ask organizations: Do you really know who has access to your data? The answers often lead to uncovering security vulnerabilities that have been overlooked.
The dynamic evolution of financial fraud creates new opportunities for defensive strategies that employ big data and analytics. Terry Austin of Guardian Analytics discusses new threats and solutions.
Data-centric security: It's a shift from securing where data resides to securing the data itself. Matt Pauker of Voltage Security tells how this approach helps organizations improve their security posture.
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