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October is Cybersecurity Awareness Month , and it’s a great time to take a closer look at the cyberresilience components of your business continuity and resilience plans to ensure your organization is on the right path to not just prevent potential cyber events, but to be prepared to respond to the new inevitable—when an incident happens.
As we reflect on lessons learned from our pandemic and multi-event response protocols, we can find many opportunities to improve business continuity practices to further solidify resilience. Cyberresilience is part of a much bigger picture and as such is evolving as a critical component of business continuity. DOWNLOAD NOW.
Today, with an increasing number of successful cyber breaches (like ransomware attacks) making headlines, resilience is often discussed in terms of cyberresilience. But when you hear the term “cyberresilience,” what does it entail and what does it mean for your operations? What is CyberResilience?
A careful self-audit is likely to reveal that your company is paying for cloud-based and/or desktop software licenses that are not being used by your employees. This often happens due to shadow IT, which is when project teams or individual workers download cloud-based software without the knowledge of the IT department.
Security leaders must educate their boards on an ongoing basis, speaking language they can understand and ensuring their updates stimulate engagement and dialogue, rather than a download of technical jargon. In fact, increasingly regulators ask to see board minutes proving that boards are engaging in robust discussion on cybersecurity.
A careful self-audit is likely to reveal that your company is paying for cloud-based and/or desktop software licenses that are not being used by your employees. This often happens due to shadow IT, which is when project teams or individual workers download cloud-based software without the knowledge of the IT department.
operational resilience framework reflecting the fact that “the sheer magnitude of what can be disrupted has increased significantly—a trend likely to continue for the foreseeable future.”² Lastly, the global regulatory push to increase operational and cyberresilience oversight is a response to very real issues, trends, and threats.
We’ve seen US states such as California passing their own privacy laws and drafting detailed regulations on cybersecurity audits, risk assessments, and automated decision making privacy by design in practice a must-do to be able to effectively respond to the demands of augmented privacy regulatory frameworks.
We’ve seen US states such as California passing their own privacy laws and drafting detailed regulations on cybersecurity audits, risk assessments, and automated decision making privacy by design in practice a must-do to be able to effectively respond to the demands of augmented privacy regulatory frameworks.
We’ve seen US states such as California passing their own privacy laws and drafting detailed regulations on cybersecurity audits, risk assessments, and automated decision making privacy by design in practice a must-do to be able to effectively respond to the demands of augmented privacy regulatory frameworks.
Following these steps, in tandem with investments in cyberresilience, can protect organizations from a costly security incident.” Therefore, if a breach occurs, attackers will have limited ability to move laterally or escalate to access levels that let them download your data or shut down your business.
Following these steps, in tandem with investments in cyberresilience, can protect organizations from a costly security incident.” Therefore, if a breach occurs, attackers will have limited ability to move laterally or escalate to access levels that let them download your data or shut down your business.
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