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Document: Recognizing Five Sources of High-Profile Data Security Breaches
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Excerpt:
Security breaches have rapidly escalated into a major source of reputational damage, business interruption, erosion of customer confidence, and economic loss for organizations across all industries. The average cost of a breach jumped 15% in 2014 to $3.5 million, and 43% of firms report having experienced a data breach in the past year. Meanwhile, businesses feel that their annual security budgets are only about 50% of what they need to adequately address the problem.
This white paper discusses the 5 major categories of vulnerabilities that IT and security professionals need to account for in their solutions planning.
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The Timeline of a Spear-Phishing Attack on Your Organization
In The Spear-Phishing Attack Timeline, you'll get an inside look at the anatomy of a spear-phishing attack. Step by step and day by day, you'll see where the mistakes get made and how vulnerabilities get exploited - all leading up to that day when the CEO must make the rounds of national news media to admit that customer data has been compromised.
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The Client Mandate on Security
Like most other organizations, law firms face new challenges every day when protecting their confidential information. Unlike many other organizations, however, law firms must also protect their client's confidential information. They have long been required to secure private information due to legal and regulatory requirements. Email is a key area of a firm's IT infrastructure when it comes to vigilance for security and governance.
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Storage Anywhere and Everywhere: Dealing with the Challenges of Data Fragmentation
The shape of the IT landscape has been evolving over the years and continues to do so. Gone are the days when one or two central systems could meet all of the organization's IT needs. We now have more departmental applications, collaboration and sharing environments, and even cloud-based services in the mix, with access via desktops, laptops, tablets and smartphones that can each store data in their own right. Against this background, are we in danger of losing control of our business information?
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Email Archives: No Longer Fit for Purpose?
This paper examines the difficulties and pain points that organizations encounter as they seek to straddle the conflicting pressures of ever increasing email volumes on one hand, and the need for faster, more flexible accessibility on the other. It also explores what practices and policies are currently in use when it comes to archiving emails, and the ways in which businesses can improve practices in this crucial area.
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