Pairing Man and Machine on Zero Trust
An industry cybersecurity expert gave agencies three pointers for protecting themselves with zero trust cybersecurity, which assumes everyone and everything on IT networks is potentially threatening.
An industry cybersecurity expert gave agencies three pointers for protecting themselves with zero trust cybersecurity, which assumes everyone and everything on IT networks is potentially threatening.
Accessing a website isn’t normally a life-or-death situation. But in November 2018, it was. A massive, destructive wildfire was burning in California, and nearly 300,000 people had to be evacuated.
The key to mitigating the risk of security threats is leveraging AI-driven analytics to continuously monitor user behavior for proactive threat detection.
When done right, cloud computing should change how organizations think and act, whether they’re serving customers or investing in cybersecurity.
The reason DoD is able to thrive on the AI frontier, where so many agencies have barely trodden, is its central platform for data tools and services.
Digital transformation allows employees to make decisions faster, facilitate rapid learning and better serve constituents.
The new way forward will require agencies to take a hard look at manual, paper-based processes that have stagnated modernization and put a strain on employees who need the flexibility to work beyond office walls.
Though cybersecurity teams were caught off guard by the sudden move to telework, the result has been something of a baptism by fire for government.
Channel shift happens when people realize that they can avoid long waits at on office or on the phone by doing a quick web chat.
For many organizations, much of their important data exists at the edge of the network. Is your agency ready to take advantage of it?