Blog
Cybersecurity State Power Struggles
April 13, 2021
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Nigel Thorpe
The 2020 US presidential election made it clear that disinformation remains one of the most powerful tools in sowing doubt into democracy. Foreign actors, most notably from Russia, China and Iran, used disinformation in the US to promote their preferred candidate and cause chaos for voters. Coupled with similar campaigns
Teta Alim
There are a lot of cybersecurity lessons to learn from 2020. It’s important that organizations take those lessons to heart now so they don’t have to play catch-up on any potential threats. The number of reported common vulnerabilities and exposures increased from 2015 to 2020, according to a 2021 report from
Zero trust: The good, the bad and the ugly
April 8, 2021
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Michael Kassner
Zero trust is a good cybersecurity platform, but experts suggest care to get it right and not disenfranchise users. Thanks to the pandemic, the zero trust cybersecurity model has come into its own. However, like most things concerning cybersecurity, zero trust has a good side, a bad side and an ugly side.
Security by design — is it just a pipe dream?
April 8, 2021
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Nigel Thorpe
Security by design is a great principle, and is intended to help ensure that networks, systems, technologies and products are all designed and built securely in the first place. This means that once they are deployed and in use, we don’t have to worry, particularly when data is being stored,
6 strategies for better K-12 cybersecurity
April 8, 2021
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Renee Tarun
As COVID made remote and hybrid learning an everyday reality, it also exposed network vulnerabilities, making cybersecurity awareness more essential than ever The education sector has had to rapidly adopt and scale new technologies to enable remote and hybrid learning as a result of the pandemic. This has created an