The battle against the COVID-19 pandemic is requiring organizations to rapidly create safer environments for their customers, clients, and employees.
Cybersecurity breaches impacting multinational corporations have become increasingly common in today’s digital age.
The coronavirus pandemic has resulted in mass school closings, children restricted to indoor activities and limitations on what they can safely do in their normal daily routine.
Cyberbullying involves using social media to make disparaging, hurtful comments about a fellow student, spreading rumors to damage someone’s reputation.
I recently sat down with the author of a new FICINT novel called Burn-In, a riveting technothriller that is not only highly entertaining but meticulously researched and presents a near-future state that is closer than you think.
The journey to better cybersecurity begins with understanding what exactly it is that your organization has to fear most and what is perceived as the weakest link in the chain.
In our increasingly hyperconnected and wireless world, tens of millions of internet users’ connections rely on a glass fiber strand no larger than a human hair.
As an avid follower of information technology trends, I have read hundreds of articles and several dozen books about artificial intelligence (A.I.) over the past six years.