Todayâs columnist, Jadee Hanson of Code42, says KPMG found that 44% of organizations will change their products, services and business models in the next few years â and that CIOs and CISOs must work together to meet this challenge. KaustavBhattacharya CreativeCommonsCC BY-NC-ND 2.0
During the height of the pandemic last year, the CISO took on new prominence within organizations. Increased security risks and hasty technology rollouts resulted in a greater chance of exposure to breaches and leaks. CISOs were forced to respond by quickly instituting measures to maintain business continuity and protect against new cyberthreats. Still, at many organizations, the crucial executive role of the CISO reports to the CIO.
The Top 25 Women Leaders in Cybersecurity of 2021 prweb.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prweb.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
minute read
Share this article:
A survey of single people found almost a third are still logging into their ex’s social-media accounts, some for revenge.
UPDATE
Breakups can be traumatic in all sorts of ways. Now we know they can pose a serious cybersecurity threat too. A new survey found that an alarming number of people are still accessing their exes’ accounts without their knowledge a handful for malicious reasons.
The survey conducted during November for Reboot Digital PR Agency found that 70 percent of exes polled have logged into their former partner’s Instagram account in the past week. And a full 65 percent of those who report social-media snooping said it had become an “obsession.”