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It’s been a couple of decades since data tapes delivered by trucks made encryption a standard enterprise cybersecurity practice. Yet even as technology has changed, sending and receiving data remains a major vulnerability, ensuring encryption’s place as a foundational security practice. What is Encryption?
In this blog post, I’ll discuss how healthcare enterprises can not only meet these challenges, but go beyond compliance to best practice to secure their data and their reputations. The Meaningful Use portion of the HITECH Act provided healthcare organizations a carrot to encourage the adoption of electronic health records.
Part of this process includes identifying where and how data is stored—on-premises, in third-party servers or in the cloud. While an organization might already know the location of structured data such as a primary customer database store, unstructureddata (such as that found in stray files and emails) is more difficult to locate.
million Healthcare remains the costliest industry for breaches at $9.8 This data is often invisible to security teams, making it difficult to track, classify, and secure. Security teams can easily track, classify, and secure shadow data while reducing the risk of breaches. While the report highlighted a 10.6%
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