October and Halloween are both fun and scary, just like cyberspace. Cyber Security Awareness Month is an excellent time for grown-ups to discuss cyber safety with us. It takes an informed cyber village to help raise savvy cyber kids, and I believe introducing cyber literacy to kids of all ages is increasingly critical. Today, every household is filled with connected devices, and I hope this information will help with better digital decision-making by kids.
Today marks an exciting day for JFrog and a substantial step forward towards ensuring end-to-end software supply chain security. JFrog Advanced Security is our unique approach for DevOps-centric security, and the only solution that was built especially for today’s modern DevOps workflows.
Customers and regulators are increasingly scrutinizing your Digital Onboarding procedure, and fraudsters are becoming more sophisticated. Verifying your online consumers’ real-life identities is an increasing problem and requirement for organizations across industries.
In the past when organizations had a new security need, they would meet that need by purchasing a new security product. But that approach is how we ended up with an average of 76 security tools per enterprise, according to a 2021 survey from Panaseer. You may have a lot of tools, but that doesn’t mean your information is protected.
The Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG) Phishing Activity Trends Report reveals that in Q2 of 2022 there were 1,097,811 total phishing attacks. This marks the worst quarter for phishing observed to date, exceeding Q1 of 2022 which was the first time the three-month total exceeded one million.
What is Phishing? You have most likely heard the term phishing thrown around social media recently, and no, people haven’t taken up a new hobby at the local lake. The first known mention of the term “phishing” stems from a program named AOHell designed in the 1990s.
Adopting a fine-grained policy-as-code authorization approach based on Open Policy Agent (OPA)– the leading open-source policy engine– is a huge step forward in building microservices applications that run reliably and securely.
Developer-centric security movements have dominated discussions in software development over recent years. The concepts are clear — integrate security early and find issues faster. But how does an organization measure the success of its developer security program?
Keeper’s powerful Automator eliminates the repetitive task of device approval for Keeper administrators. With Keeper Automator, users will enjoy instant access to Keeper on any new device without having to wait for manual administrative approval. Now with Microsoft Azure support, administrators can deploy Keeper Automator to an Azure Container Service, providing a fully cloud hosted instance of Automator.