This site uses cookies to improve your experience. To help us insure we adhere to various privacy regulations, please select your country/region of residence. If you do not select a country, we will assume you are from the United States. Select your Cookie Settings or view our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Cookie Settings
Cookies and similar technologies are used on this website for proper function of the website, for tracking performance analytics and for marketing purposes. We and some of our third-party providers may use cookie data for various purposes. Please review the cookie settings below and choose your preference.
Used for the proper function of the website
Used for monitoring website traffic and interactions
Cookie Settings
Cookies and similar technologies are used on this website for proper function of the website, for tracking performance analytics and for marketing purposes. We and some of our third-party providers may use cookie data for various purposes. Please review the cookie settings below and choose your preference.
Strictly Necessary: Used for the proper function of the website
Performance/Analytics: Used for monitoring website traffic and interactions
billion in 2018. According to the IC3 Annual Report released in April 2019 financial losses reached $2.7 billion in 2018. Most financially devastating threats involved investment scams, business email compromises (BEC) , and romance fraud. What about databreaches? Financial losses reached $2.7
As retailers expand their digitization, they need to continually address cybersecurity since the challenge to secure critical and confidential data will only increase. It also suggests that while retailers are increasing IT security spending this year, they admit having been breached in the last year. Nearly 95 percent of U.S.
Databreaches are the new normal. According to our 2018 Global DataThreatReport , 67% of enterprises have been breached, with that percentage rate growing every year. As organizations move to the cloud, it is critical that they consider new security measures to protect their data.
2020 marks the launch of the Thales DataThreatReport-Global Edition for the seventh consecutive year. This year the report focuses on the post digital transformation era. The 2020 Thales DataThreatReport-Global Edition indicates that we have reached a tipping point.
August is two-thirds of the way through year, and we have already seen a number of serious, far-reaching databreaches making headlines, some occurred in 2018, and some from 2017 that are now being disclosed. When it comes to databreach notification laws, things can get tricky and complex, varying state-by-state.
One of the top findings from the 2018 Thales DataThreatReport, Financial Services Edition was that databreaches in U.S. Not only are breaches at record highs – with 65% of U.S. financial services organizations are increasing at an alarming rate.
In past years’ Thales DataThreatReports, we asked IT security pros around the world separate questions about whom they believed were the riskiest internal threats and external threats. It seems clear that for most organizations, protecting their data is a secondary priority. So what’s going on?
Protecting Consumer Data is Priority #1. In our 2018DataThreatReport-Retail Edition , we found 50% of respondents reported a databreach this past year, so it goes without saying that the holiday shopping season is a prime time for cyber criminals to target both retailers and consumers alike.
Around the world, enterprises are anxious about May 25, 2018, the day enforcement begins for the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Nearly one-quarter (24%) of the respondents to the 2018 Thales DataThreatReport (DTR) survey 1 indicate they already are using containers in production.
While it’s no surprise to anybody reading this that databreaches are on the rise, the attacks facing healthcare organizations, most recently in Asia, are particularly worrisome. One need not look very far to find examples of the threats facing these entities: In Singapore, 1.5 Evolving Threat Landscape.
Ahead of the May 2018 legislation, we’ve been asking organisations if they’re #FITforGDPR – whether they’re ready to improve their personal data protections, as well as take on the increased accountability for databreaches, should they occur. As expected, responses have been mixed.
The age of Big Data is upon us. And, as more data is available for analytical purposes, more sensitive and private information is at risk. In a world where databreaches are all to common, Pivotal Greenplum has partnered with Thales eSecurity to ensure its Big Data is also safe data. respondents.”.
As I was starting to write this blog, yet another retail program databreach occurred, for Marriott’s Starwood loyalty program. What I’d originally planned to write about was a topic that directly applies – why retailers of all stripes are not investing in data security. This had me asking a simple question – Why?
These technologies allow organizations to better create and manage data, as well as store critical information more efficiently. According to the Thales eSecurity 2018 Global DataThreatReport, Healthcare Edition , 95% of U.S. respondents reported using these technologies with sensitive data.
Another day, another breach. Barely a day goes by where we don’t hear of a databreach. Affecting big companies and small in virtually every vertical and hitting government institutions at the local, state and federal level, sensitive data is routinely exfiltrated, stolen and leveraged with shocking regularity.
According to the 2018 Thales DataThreatReport , two in five global healthcare organisations (39%) experienced a databreach in the last year, and that’s using today’s relatively modest and well-understood web systems.
DataBreach Statistics Experiencing a databreach leads companies to many undesirable consequences—financial and reputational damages, disruption of business continuity, compliance violations, and others. The average cost of a databreach is $3.86
The historic amount of coverage that databreaches have produced in 2018 has exposed executives and consumers to the importance of security, like no year before. At the same time, enterprise organizations that spend more than 10% of their IT budget on security, 34% say that they have experienced a breach in the past year.
The urgency around data security is increasing. Over the years, the federal government has developed a wide range of cyber policies, programs and technologies, yet databreaches are occurring with increasing frequency.
Some smaller companies have even gone out of business as the result of a databreach. The Threat Level Is Rising. having been breached at some point in the past. And, as we’ve all seen, the failure to manage digital risks can have a negative impact on the reputation, operations and market value of affected enterprises.
However, when analyzed by new algorithmic data mining methods, big data can reveal patterns, trends, and associations that can, among other things, relate to human behavior and interactions. This is how big data analytics is enabling behavioral biometric-authentication mechanisms.
This morning we announced, in tandem with our partner 451 Research, the Global Edition of the 2018 Thales DataThreatReport. It’s abundantly clear that medium to larger enterprises (the focus of the report and underlying survey) are finding it harder than ever to protect their sensitive data.
However, with just days left of this year, it’s time to turn our attention from reflection to preparation, looking at what 2018 has in store for the payments industry. In 2018, we’ll see these smaller markets able to innovate further, without being held back by infrastructure and processes that come with being a big industry player.
to discuss the findings of the 2018 Thales DataThreatReport, Federal Edition. Question: Can you provide an overview of the 2018 Thales DataThreatReport, Federal Edition, and elaborate why it’s needed today more than ever? Question: In a world where some 68 percent of U.S.
However, one recently introduced UK cybersecurity law, which was meant to boost the resilience of the UK's energy sector by obliging gas and electricity firms to report to hacks, doesn't appear to be very effectively adopted. FBI Internet Crime Report 2020: Cybercrime Skyrocketed, with Email Compromise Accounting for 43% of Losses.
Findings from the 2018 Federal Edition of the DataThreatReport. So far in 2018, we’ve already seen a handful of government agency mishaps when it comes to security. The report also reveals that the U.S. The report also reveals that the U.S. national security at risk. The numbers don’t lie.
million individuals The FBI warns of HiatusRAT scanning campaigns against Chinese-branded web cameras and DVRs Russia FSB relies on Ukrainian minors for criminal activities disguised as “quest games” U.S.
We organize all of the trending information in your field so you don't have to. Join 28,000+ users and stay up to date on the latest articles your peers are reading.
You know about us, now we want to get to know you!
Let's personalize your content
Let's get even more personalized
We recognize your account from another site in our network, please click 'Send Email' below to continue with verifying your account and setting a password.
Let's personalize your content