This monthly Security Agenda will highlight some of the most recent additions to our course library. June's edition features Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta's Payments Risk Expert, David Lott discussing mobile wallets and emerging fraud. Other industry influencers like US Bank's Mark Gelhardt, Georgia Tech Research...
This monthly Security Agenda will highlight some of the most recent additions to our course library. January's edition features former RSA chair Art Coviello discussing "Tactical and Investment Advice for Responding to Attackers." Other industry influencers like internet pioneer Vent Cerf, John Buzzard, Fraud Expert...
Singapore is a highly connected country where essential services, businesses and people have become very reliant on digital technologies and network-connectivity. Singapore, has also seen its share of cyber-attacks that have highlighted the vulnerability of its ICT technologies.
With cyber threats growing in...
This panel will review some of the key themes discussed during the first day of the summit, and foreshadow how those key themes and others will be carried over into the next day. Which sessions will be hot, and how will tomorrow's speakers expand on the topics raised today?Additional Summit Insight:Hear from more...
As information-security threats intensify, organizations risk becoming disoriented - focused more on grappling with complex technology, an explosion of data, increased regulation and a debilitating skills shortage. This is a huge danger, since prompt action is required to interpret an increasingly complex threat...
By 2019, nearly 90 million mobile wallet users will be providing a valuable stream of interchange revenue and transaction data for wallet providers. Offering a mobile wallet is a competitive move that financial institutions and issuers simply cannot ignore. But attackers have interest in mobile wallets as well, and...
In a fast changing world, financial institutions are increasingly at the mercy of smart assaults on their ATM networks. Vigilance is no longer enough to defend against ATM fraud. Breaches are inevitable as hackers develop new methods for exploiting ATM security vulnerabilities. In order to win, security tech needs a...
Non-stop technology innovation, dynamic business environment, attackers exploit every conceivable gap, older security technologies not keeping up, newer ones coming at you at a dizzying pace, over-invested, underinvested, scarcity of security personnel-no perfect answers. Increasingly sophisticated and dangerous...
Additional Summit Insight:Hear from more industry influencers, earn CPE credits, and network with leaders of technology at our global events. Learn more at our Fraud & Breach Prevention Events site.
Early Detection and rapid response are amongst the most critical capabilities for targeted attack remediation. Media reports indicate that well resources adversaries consistently bypass sophisticated organisational defenses. The issue is less about being able to keep the bad guys out - It's more about detecting them...
The third edition of ISMG's Data Breach and Fraud Prevention Summit in Asia took off June 8 in Mumbai. Here are some highlights and first impressions from the day-long event, featuring key industry thought leaders.
It's a boom time for cybercrime and cyber-espionage, aided by at least two factors. First, many organizations' websites and databases sport well-known technical weaknesses, while employees remain all to susceptible to low-cost social-engineering attacks. Second, attackers can pummel these technical and human targets...
How well prepared are organizations to respond to a potentially devastating data breach - such as the likes that hit Anthem, OPM or even Ashley Madison? Are their security programs and controls truly as effective as security leaders believe them to be? These are among the questions answered by the results of the 2015...
Do you have a supply chain or just vendors? Do any or all of them present a breach potential? We apply massive resources to hardening perimeters and preventing infiltration of our information security systems, but what if our adversaries have a built-in presence and already have a foothold in the software, hardware,...
The absolute worst time to develop a breach response plan is directly after you have discovered a breach. The absolute best way to have your response team fail is to have them untrained on rarely practiced procedures while being overly reliant upon expensive, improperly configured technology. It is proven that humans...
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