Addressing Security Challenges in the ‘New Normal’
During lockdown, enterprise organizations experienced an 85% increase in phishing attacks targeting remote workers. Here are 4 specific tips to help secure your new remote workforce.
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During lockdown, enterprise organizations experienced an 85% increase in phishing attacks targeting remote workers. Here are 4 specific tips to help secure your new remote workforce.
Digital innovation is all around us. New technologies and advances enter the market each and every day, and 5G edge computing is just one example of digital innovation at its best. While 5G edge computing is poised to improve the performance of applications and enable large amounts of data to be processed in real-time, it also comes with a distinct set of security challenges.
On the heels of the SolarWinds incident that let hackers access 100+ federal agencies and countless commercial clients including Microsoft, the Biden administration is about to pull the trigger on new regulation designed to protect national assets.
The new law will set minimum security standards for IoT devices, but what exactly will that mean for government agencies deploying those devices?
So what distinguishes 5G from traditional Wi-Fi? What 5G does for IoT is give us a readily-available, standards-based, and common connectivity type that’s reliable, fast, and secure. Whereas Wi-Fi is challenged by its range, the improved speed, capacity, and lower latency of 5G can transmit data at a fast, reliable rate, and at longer distances (although not as far as current 4G technology).