Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

PCI DSS 4.0 Compliance: A Guide to Requirements 6 & 11

As of March 31, 2025, full enforcement of the PCI DSS 4.0 guidelines is now in effect. This latest version introduces critical updates that strengthen payment card data security across digital environments. Among the most notable changes are requirements that target client-side security, an area that has been largely overlooked until now.

How Third-Party Pixels Jeopardize HIPAA Compliance on Healthcare Websites

Third-party pixels are snippets of JavaScript embedded on healthcare websites to track user behavior — but they can unintentionally transmit PHI (Protected Health Information) to unauthorized recipients like Meta, Google, and others. Common pixel-triggered compliance issues include: Recent lawsuits and regulatory crackdowns (including FTC enforcement and OCR guidance) have made it clear: tracking technologies on healthcare websites can constitute a HIPAA breach.

What Every CISO Needs to Know About HIPAA and Online Tracking Technologies in 2025

In 2025, HIPAA enforcement has expanded beyond internal systems and EHRs to include what happens in users’ browsers. That means even seemingly harmless scripts — like ad pixels or analytics tags — can expose protected health information (PHI).

Are Your Web Apps Vulnerable to Infostealers Hiding in Browser Scripts?

Infostealers don’t behave like traditional malware. They work silently in the browser — the client side — harvesting saved passwords, session tokens, credit card data, and more. Attackers use common browser behaviors (JavaScript execution, third-party scripts, DOM manipulations) to: These threats often bypass traditional server-side or endpoint protection, making them invisible to most security tools unless you’re monitoring the browser itself.

The 10 Most Costly GDPR Mistakes Banks and Financial Institutions Make

Financial services firms operate in a high-risk environment where personal and financial data converge — and errors are expensive. Despite robust back-end controls, many still: GDPR’s complexity — 99 articles and multiple regional interpretations — creates audit friction even for mature teams.

What Payment Page Scenarios Trigger PCI DSS 4.0 Requirements - and How Can CISOs Stay Compliant?

Because PCI DSS 4.0 shifts focus to client-side risk, payment pages — especially those using JavaScript, third-party scripts, or marketing tags — are under increased scrutiny. Even if your backend is secure, what happens in the browser can expose cardholder data or create audit failure risk.

Everything You Need to Know About Web Application Firewalls

Protecting client-side web applications and websites is a critical goal shared by both the application development and cybersecurity teams. Web application vulnerabilities are among the most common attack vectors. However, there’s still confusion over who owns client-side security: As application security shifts left, the answer is: both teams must collaborate.