Remove 2012 Remove CSO Remove Risk
article thumbnail

A Clear and Present Need: Bolster Your Identity Security with Threat Detection and Response

Duo's Security Blog

“It took nearly 11 months (328 days) to identity and contain data breaches resulting from stolen or compromised credentials.” – IBM’s Cost of Data Breach Report 2023 I recently came across a 2012 article from CSO Online , and realized that it has been more than 11 years since the phrase “Identity is the new perimeter” was coined!

article thumbnail

How to Speak Information Security to Executives: A CSO Perspective

NopSec

According to recent research over 60 percent of survey participants stated their executives are only “somewhat” or “not at all” informed about the information security risk and threats their organizations face. In a meeting with my previous CFO, I was discussing the risk posture of the organization.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Legendary Entertainment Relies on MVISION CNAPP Across Its Multicloud Environment

McAfee

Under the guidance of Dan Meacham, VP of Global Security and Corporate Operations and CSO/CISO, the multi-billion dollar organization transitioned from on-premises data centers to the cloud in 2012. Unacceptable levels of risk. Risk reduction through contextual entitlements. Banishing Shadow IT.

article thumbnail

Why do CISOs Keep Quitting on Florida?

SecureWorld News

And this is increasing cyber risk. David Taylor, CIO for the state of Florida from 2008 to 2012, said this about the state's funding: "In terms of the third-largest state, it’s a ludicrously insufficient amount of money.". There’s no way around it.

CISO 98
article thumbnail

Managing chaos: How 9/11 and the pandemic changed the way organisations understand critical events

IT Security Guru

Precisely halfway in a police career that lasted until 2012, the second half was very different from the first as he ascended to the position of an assistant director of national security. . This was the moment risk management, and the costs of forgetting to take it seriously, stepped into the mainstream. . “It