Companies frequently lose data, including national identification and Social Security numbers. Corporate secrets are sometimes disclosed by malicious insiders.
If we can’t trust our own employees, how can we know who to trust? In this episode, Shannon Sedgwick, Senior Managing Director, Ankura and Scott Fletcher, Cloud Solution Engineer, Oracle, discuss the following;
– Loss of Corporate Secrets
– How an employee leaked classified information to an unauthorised individual? – Fake social media profiles
– How the UK government is responding to this.
– Hackers taking advantage of agricultural technology – What does the future look like for “smart” agritech look like?
More Stories
The Recent Security Breach Was Caused by the Lapsus Hacking Group, According to Uber
On Monday, Uber revealed further information about the security breach last week, tying it to a threat actor it suspects...
2Factors Episode 3 – General Motors, Deepfakes, Ransomware Attack against SpiceJet
https://youtu.be/PeDKL6Ua970 In this episode, Tinesh Chhaya, Founder, Decipher Cyber and John Karabin, Senior Director - Cyber Security, NTT, discuss the...
2Factors Episode 1 – The Metaverse, Hyper-Personalisation, Privacy, World Events and Cyber Attacks
https://youtu.be/Opid87KUnQ0 The Metaverse How are cyber professionals going to navigate cyber crime in a new dimension? Hypersonailisation and privacy How...
The Metaverse
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sEwxsB0ZA8 After Facebook's parent company, Meta, renamed itself to reflect its new direction, the term gained a lot of traction....
Giant Online Platforms Including WhatsApp and Snapchat Fined By Russian Regulators over Data Storage Wrangle
Russian regulators have fined Meta-owned platforms WhatsApp and Snapchat
for allegedly refusing to store Russian users’ data on Russia-based servers as
part of the government’s effort to control its citizens’ online activities.
According to a ruling by Moscow’s Tagansky District Court, on Thursday, July
28, WhatsApp was served a $300,000 (18 million rubles) fine for a repeat
offense following a $664,000 (4 million rubles) penalty imposed on the online
chat giant last year.