Cyber resilience is more than just a new way of talking about disaster recovery and business continuity. Here's a checklist you can use to identify blind spots and security gaps to improve cyber resilience across the organization.
Taking the proactive steps now to advance cyber resilience will help improve an organization's ability to secure and recover data swiftly when targeted by a cyberattack.
Cyber resilience requires a holistic approach to risk reduction — people, processes, and technology all continually optimized as the nature of the threat landscape changes.
The WWT Research: Security Priorities Report identified cybersecurity priorities for security teams navigating evolving technology landscapes and working environments.
Chief information security officers (CISOs) will need to take an end-to-end approach to stay ahead of cybersecurity threats this year and beyond. This entails evaluating the relationship between cybersecurity, storage, and cyber resilience.
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.
Enterprise security executives generally don’t plan for nation-state-level cyberattacks on their businesses. That may change going forward, when analyzing new trends in hacking and cybersecurity.
National Cyber Resilience Centre Group (NCRCG) is comprised of government and corporate entities working together to ensure cybersecurity across the United Kingdom.