Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

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Privacy Impact Assessment - PIA vs DPIA (GDPR)

Before GDPR, PIA (Privacy Impact Assessment) were a thing. This topic is around privacy impact assessment, its purpose, PIA vs DPIA and includes the underlying context of GDPR compliance. The monotony has been changed since the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) came into existence; it has significantly changed the concept of data privacy and security.

What is Unified Policy as Code, and Why Do You Need It?

Uptime. Reliability. Efficiency. These used to be perks, elements of forward-thinking and premium-level enterprises. Now they’re a baseline expectation. Today, consumers expect information, resources, and services to be available on-demand, updated in real time, and accessible without fuss. Imagine trying to Google something or place an order from Amazon only to be told, “Please try again in 48 hours. Sorry for the inconvenience.”

Harnessing security expertise to power SAST and Code Security

Join us for a live stream with Benji Kalman, Director of Security RnD at Snyk, to talk about his experience in security research and managing the Security team over at Snyk. We'll talk about his role, what are day-to-day activities like, what are the challenges, and then connect it to the deep security expertise that help augment secure coding via Static Application Security Testing (SAST) tools.

Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) GDPR - meaning, methodology and more!

A DPIA is a Data Protection Impact Assessment. It’s an assessment of the likely impact on data subjects (individual) and their rights, both regarding privacy and freedom to conduct business. The goal: To identify what measures might be needed for compliance with GDPR or equivalent legislation elsewhere in the world before beginning a new process involving personal data that will make it clear how that individual’s right is affected by this project.

What Makes a Security Analyst Successful? Investigative Thinking

The new SANS 2021 Report: Top Skills Analysts Need to Master analyzes the need for organizations to invest in improving their security operations and identifies the skills analysts must master to support this initiative. Characterizing an analyst as essentially an investigator, the SANS report breaks the investigative process down into two primary areas: Investigative Tasks and Investigative Thinking.