In response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, U.S. President Joe Biden released a statement on the state of cybersecurity in the nation. Cybersecurity leaders can follow many recommendations to improve security at their organizations.
Organizations should invest in a cybersecurity incident response plan and test security resilience to prepare for Russian state-sponsored threat groups, according to a new cyber advisory.
The Regional Security Operations Center (RSOC), launched via a partnership between Angelo State University (ASU) and the Texas Department of Information Resources (DBIR), aims to serve local governments in need of cybersecurity assistance.
After a ransomware attack or cyber extortion incident, businesses often go through the phases of grief. Navigating incident response and turning grief into resilience is paramount to building a strong organizational cyber defense.
A cyberattack on the Russian Federal Air Transport Agency's (Rosaviatsia) infrastructure allegedly erased all documents, files, aircraft registration data and emails from the servers.
For the past many years, the focus in cybersecurity has been on collecting data. But now, cybersecurity leaders are drowning in data, which is introducing a new type of risk to organizations. By increasing their data observability capabilities, organizations can improve performance, threat detection, incident response and other key processes.
Business security leaders must understand the importance of their role in organizational resilience. To stay relevant and succeed in times of rapid change and increasing uncertainty, businesses can leverage digitization to manage risk and become more adaptable.