EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we find out how a new data strategy is helping the British Heart Foundation to raise money and support medical research. We examine the benefits of using AI in advanced malware detection. And we reveal why the Information Commissioner is under fire for weak responses to serious data breaches. Read the issue now.
WHITE PAPER:
Intel conducted tests on Web servers serving encypted data to quantify the benefits of AES-NI and found that AES-NI reduced computational overhead of encyrption by 50 percent. Continue reading this paper to learn more about the tests and results.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we talk to the leader of ExxonMobil's data organisation, about the energy giant's strategy to establish enterprise-wide principles for the use of data. As the UK's Online Safety Act comes into force, we examine the tech sector's concerns over the laws around end-to-end encryption. Read the issue now.
EGUIDE:
In this e-guide: While many organisations are focusing on the huge fines for non-compliance and the significant financial and reputational costs of data breaches, it is the fact that good data protection and privacy practices builds consumer trust and enables the innovative use of data that should be driving organisations to act.
EGUIDE:
This year's transition to remote working highlighted big gaps in the fundamentals of security, as updated TechTarget/Computer Weekly data reveals.
EGUIDE:
The Theatre of Dreams briefly turned into The Theatre of Nightmares last week as Manchester United Football Club suffered a cyber-attack on their systems. This e-Guide dives into more depth about how the attack happened and what Manchester United's cyber security team did, in order to prevent a loss of data and keep a clean sheet.
EBOOK:
In our expert handbook, managing editor Brenda Horrigan and Nemertes Research president Johna Till Johnson explain how to implement a zero-trust approach to cybersecurity.
EGUIDE:
In this E-Guide we go in-depth to explore the concept of zerotrust. First, Cliff Saran explores some of the basics of zerotrust, exploring how the advent of mobile computing, remote working, and software-as-a-service (SaaS) had already started the shift in security focus away from the perimeter – even before the Covid-19 pandemic.