Information is now the largest and most valuable resource on the planet. Where organizations once kept it mostly within their four walls, their employees now quickly transmit it over the airwaves and store it far from the office.
Stephen Walters, a sales engineer at DevOps provider Everbridge, says the risk is higher than ever: “The value of data has reached its highest point. At the same time, hackers are hunting for it to use it for malicious purposes. This increases the need for security and drives the need for DevSecOps solutions like never before.”
Perhaps the biggest challenge in implementing enhanced security practices is people. We all make mistakes. But how we learn to be more resilient to change and emerging threats matters more than ever. We talk all the time about embedding security processes and tools into the way we work. But first, we must invest in what matters most: the human element of DevSecOps.
IDC: Cloud Rights and Access Management Leading Security Risk
06.08.2021
IDC research has shown the critical importance of el salvador mobile database over-permissions in the cloud, writes Sivan Krigsman, chief product officer and co-founder of Ermetic, on eWeek.
The flexibility of public clouds allows customers to provision resources at the click of a button, launch containers based on dynamic scaling requirements, and more. A typical public cloud deployment can quickly become a vast maze of interconnected machines, users, applications, services, containers, and microservices.
Therefore, monitoring, assessing risks, and defining access and permission policies for multiple machines (applications, services, etc.) and human identities is a huge task, especially as more organizations adopt a multi-cloud computing strategy.
Cyber resilience depends on the human factor
-
- Posts: 349
- Joined: Sat Dec 14, 2024 3:29 am