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Using data science to improve threat analysis | AT&T ThreatTraq

Every week, the AT&T Chief Security Office produces a set of videos with helpful information and news commentary for InfoSec practitioners and researchers. I really enjoy them, and you can subscribe to the Youtube channel to stay updated. This is a transcript of a recent feature on ThreatTraq. Watch the video here.

How to Make Your Business HIPAA Compliant

Ensuring that your health industry business complies with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act or HIPAA is often considered a costly burden and another red-tape requirement. A majority (69%) of businesses view compliance as the cost driver for setting up compliance programs. But a similar number of companies (64%) note that HIPAA is a very effective method to keep health data safe. It is a crucial step to take to protect both your clients and your company from data breaches and.additionally from non-compliance fines if a breach occurs.

Infosecurity Europe 2019

AT&T Cybersecurity had a big presence at Infosecurity Europe 2019 in London, June 4-6. Our theme was unifying security management with people, process and technologies. While the industry is generally moving in the right direction, IT teams still struggle with being overwhelmed on the technology side, not knowing where to begin on the process side, and finding (or being able to afford) people with the right security skill sets.

Industry Analysts Recognizing Cloud Analytics Brings Wave of Disruption to the SIEM Market

In the new report, “Analytics is making its security operations mark ahead of schedule,” analyst firm 451 Research details the accelerating transition happening in the security information and event management (SIEM) space. The report underscores how new cloud-native analytics solutions are displacing traditional SIEMs at the heart of the defense.

The Tax Paying Hacker: A Modern Phenomenon

In a dark room lit only by the light from four computer monitors sits a hacker named Hector (not his real name). You can hear the faint pulse of an EDM track coming from his headphones as Hector taps away on his computer’s keyboard. The above description could serve as the setting for a hacker movie set in the early 2000s. But it doesn’t work in today’s context. Nowadays, Hector sits in a brightly lit room with multiple screens at his disposal.