The public sector is critical to national and international security. Yet, new research from SecurityScorecard and the Cyentia Institute found that 61.6% of public sector agencies have open cyber vulnerabilities, taking a median of 309 days to remediate. What’s more, 53% of public sector agencies are losing ground closing their cyber vulnerabilities, due in large part to a greater reliance on third-party vendors with less-than-optimal cybersecurity hygiene.
Market pressures and growth opportunities are accelerating digital transformation. According to Gartner, 89 percent of board directors say digital is embedded in all business growth strategies. Meanwhile 99 percent say that digital transformation has had a positive impact on profitability and performance (KPMG). The cloud, connected IoT devices, and remote work capabilities are the cornerstones of digital transformation.
Co-authored by David Willis and Gary Jenkins As we wrote in an earlier blog, the concept of cybersecurity risk continues to be codified, qualified, and, finally, quantified. With the rise of RESTful API endpoint support and near-real time telemetry sharing, companies can seize the opportunity to automate the IT/security stack’s response to risky users (in addition to devices, data, and applications—to be covered in future blogs).
The number and complexity of software vulnerabilities is continuously growing. The ability of development and security teams to assess the threat level a given vulnerability poses and prioritize fix efforts accordingly greatly depends on access to as much context as possible about the vulnerability.
When a hacker breaches a network or system, data exfiltration often follows. But what is data exfiltration and how can you prevent it?