More and more often companies are identifying the greatest threat to their business as coming from within. Suddenly being protected from viruses becomes a moot point. If an employee has always played by the book, then yes it is unfair that they...
Four years ago one high profile case saw a Dell employee sacked for sending smutty emails, yet four years on companies are still failing to crack down. David Warner, a partner at law firm Morrison & Foerster, told silicon.com that companies must...
According to findings released today, 99 per cent of respondents said they are protected from threats while only three per cent of European IT bosses don't believe they will ever be 100 per cent secure.
Now the greatest threat is very much inside the organisation but I'm not sure there are that many businesses who have realised it's possible to plug in an iPod and just walk away with the whole business in a matter of minutes.
The analyst house claims attackers are shifting their focus from well-protected email systems to IM as its use by employees within organisations increases. Viruses are the main threat and Gartner says IT managers who do not adequately protect...
The data was encrypted and password-protected but subsequently decrypted and stored on the now-lost hardware by the Hummingbird employee, TGSL said. Toronto-based Hummingbird said in a statement on Wednesday: "The data was protected through...