Companies are growing more aware of the need to prevent cyberattacks, rather than simply deal with them after they happen. A recent TEISS Breakfast Briefing discussed the reasons why
As the cyber-threat landscape evolves, businesses face growing challenges in achieving cyber-security maturity. A group of cyber-security professionals share their insights
Twitter Inc on Monday disbanded its Trust and Safety Council, a volunteer group formed in 2016 to advise the social media platform on site decisions, according to an email reviewed by Reuters.
Twitter’s former head of trust and safety Yoel Roth on Tuesday said the social media company was not safer under new owner Elon Musk, warning in his first interview since resigning this month that the company no longer had enough staff for safety work.
General Motors’ startup unit Cruise LLC said Thursday it had recalled and updated software in 80 self-driving vehicles after a June crash in San Francisco that left two people injured.
A hacker can gain access to a network within seconds with a brute-force password attack if weak or compromised passwords are in use. Ignoring this is like leaving your front door open when you go out.
Organisations are spending vast amounts on cyber-security, but the maturity of their defences has barely improved over the last decade. What should they be doing?
On 6 December 2021, news broke of the Apache Log4j vulnerability. It gives attackers control of log messages, opens up the ability to execute arbitrary code loaded from LDAP servers.