Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

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Vulnerability Scanning vs. Penetration Testing

It amazes me how many people confuse the importance of vulnerability scanning with penetration testing. Vulnerability scanning cannot replace the importance of penetration testing, and penetration testing on its own cannot secure the entire network. Both are important at their respective levels, needed in cyber risk analysis and are required by standards such as PCI, HIPAA and ISO 27001.

Don't Use Production Data In Your Test Environment: The Impact Of Leaked Test Credentials

To deliver technology products and services, companies use multiple technology environments so that changes, updates, and testing can be completed in a controlled way without interrupting customer experience. This is a best practice approach that maintains high levels of system stability, uptime and security. These “non-production”, or test environments should ideally be completely disconnected from production environments to prevent security incidents and bugs.

The Netacea Virtual Waiting Room

Netacea’s Virtual Waiting Room is a cloud-based service that sits in front of your website, mobile app and APIs, controlling the flow of visitors. Guarantee a positive customer omni-channel experience even under extreme conditions such as Black Friday. The use of online services has revolutionised the way we consume everything every day, which has made life great! What’s not so great though is when these services cannot meet the consumer demand that they generate, and then become unavailable.

Sales Play Book - Value Proposition

Today’s email attacks (ransomware, business email compromise, and sandbox evasion) have evolved, and are outpacing the tools developed to combat them. While they may help with some aspects of email security or stop some attacks, they don’t solve the whole problem and attacks need only succeed once to seriously harm people, data, and brands. Partial security is not security.

Observability and Visibility in DevSecOps

Companies often turn to software as a solution when they need to solve a problem. Whether it’s to automate or enhance a task, or gain valuable information in an easily consumable fashion. The same is true for security teams on both sides of the red and blue line. Security professionals build tools to automate exploitation, detect attacks, or process large amounts of data into a usable form.