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.
EGUIDE:
The discovery of the Meltdown and Spectre microprocessor vulnerabilities, and several similar vulnerabilities in the months that followed, were probably the single most challenging developments for enterprise IT security teams in 2018. Here's a look back over Computer Weekly's top 10 IT Security stories of 2018.
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.
EZINE:
With regulations pushing data protection up the business agenda, we look at how Australia's Notifiable Data Breaches scheme has been received and consider why a survey that found Australian firms are experiencing fewer cyber breach incidents appears to conflict with anecdotal evidence that suggests the opposite.
EGUIDE:
SD-WAN can improve security in many ways. Simply migrating to a viable SD-WAN offering can bring benefits. But SD-WAN also provides security features to protect the traffic it manages, as well as features that protect the offering itself. Read this expert e-guide to uncover 4 different areas where enterprises should consider SD-WAN and security.
RESEARCH CONTENT:
The purpose of this article is to explain what the MITRE ATT&CK framework is and how it has become the de-facto industry standard for describing cyber adversarial behaviour. It will illustrate why it was created, why it can be considered a burgeoning cyber security ontology, and how it ended up being the one of the most widespread frameworks.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, tech companies are calling on the European Commission to rethink plans to weaken internet encryption – we explore the issues. We talk to credit rating agency Moody's about why it thinks now is the time to invest in quantum computing. Read the issue now.