Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Understanding Risk Management in Trading for Newcomers

Risk management is a crucial pillar of successful trading, especially for newcomers navigating the often volatile financial markets. At its core, risk management involves identifying, assessing, and prioritizing risks to minimize potential losses. New traders should start by determining their risk tolerance - an understanding of how much they can afford to lose without jeopardizing their financial stability. Keeping a crypto trading diary can also help in tracking decisions and outcomes, which is essential for improving one's approach to risk management.

Passwork: The ultimate self-hosted solution for password management

In the current cybersecurity landscape, protecting sensitive information is more crucial than ever. Password managers have become an essential tool for businesses to manage credentials securely and efficiently. With numerous options on the market, finding the right password manager can be overwhelming, especially for companies seeking full control over their data. Enter Passwork-a self hosting password manager designed specifically for businesses.
Featured Post

How Organisations Can Master Incident Reporting Obligations Under NIS2

The new NIS2 directive is designed to strengthen the cyber resilience of over 160,000 companies that operate in the EU - either directly or indirectly. Coming into force by 17th October, NIS2 regulations will outline how these essential entities can combat increasingly sophisticated and frequent cyber attacks.

Vanta Delivers: Introducing New Products for the Future of Governance, Risk and Compliance (GRC)

Empowering GRC teams to make their security and compliance continuous and automated. Announcing Report Center, enhancements to Vendor Risk Management (VRM), and market-leading milestones for integrations and frameworks.

Cloudy with a chance of breach: advanced threat hunting strategies for a hyperconnected and SaaSy world

When workloads moved to the cloud, a huge burden was lifted from the enterprise in infrastructure and operational overhead. This transition also brought with it the “shared responsibility” model, where cloud providers took on much of the responsibility previously relegated to expensive engineering teams.