Pereira has nearly three decades of journalism experience. He is the former editor of CHIP, InformationWeek and CISO MAG. He has also written for The Times of India and The Indian Express.
Google asserts that platformization and consolidation can help contain today's sophisticated threats. Embedding generative AI into security is also required as the industry moves from assisted AI to semi-autonomous and, eventually, to autonomous security, with the goal of security by default.
David Gee, board risk adviser, non-executive director and author, shares leadership lessons from his career in his latest book, "The Aspiring CIO and CISO." He discusses his approach to managing cybersecurity risks, engaging with teams and simplifying communication.
Global CIOs said the fallout from the CrowdStrike outage could have been mitigated by investing in comprehensive data resilience that can help restore corrupted data through orchestrated recovery. It can help recover from disasters such as ransomware, data corruption and catastrophic events.
A new Gartner poll shows 55% of organizations have established AI boards to govern artificial intelligence initiatives. As AI's influence grows across business functions, these boards can help reduce risks and drive value by establishing regulation and governance.
At the Gartner Security and Risk Management Summit, Thomas Lintemuth, vice president analyst at Gartner, discussed how network security tooling has evolved, blending technologies such as firewall, SSE, NDR and SASE. He covered VPNs, microsegmentation and the deployment of policy enforcement points.
Cisco's 2024 Cybersecurity Readiness Index shows a concerning gap - while 80% of organizations feel confident in their cybersecurity readiness, only 3% have a "Mature" level of readiness. This suggests companies must plan cybersecurity budgets, upgrade infrastructure and adopt AI for resilience.
Generative AI tools, such as ChatGPT and GitHub Copilot, hold promise for cybersecurity enhancement. Kevin Schmidt, director analyst at Gartner, explores AI's potential for bug detection, threat monitoring and easing SOC burdens, along with organizational challenges.
Enterprises have deliberated on implementing zero trust for years, but vendors are overpromising and under-delivering on zero trust solutions. Gartner Vice President Analyst John Watts discusses the current adoption status and misunderstandings surrounding the framework.
Credit risk is a persistent challenge for financial institutions, particularly in business lending. Ivan Perić, head of global artificial intelligence R&D at Synechron, discussed how AI can assess credit risk, ensure regulatory compliance and mitigate operational risks.
With elections in more than 50 countries this year, bad actors and nation-states will likely misuse AI to misinform 2 billion voters. Mark Johnston, director of the office of the CISO at Google Cloud, explains how pre-bunking techniques can help users check AI-driven misinformation campaigns.
Machines are gradually taking on activities of human customers such as research, negotiations and user reviews. The rise of the AI customers marks a shift from machines as passive tools to active participants in economic transactions, said Donald Scheibenreif, vice president and analyst at Gartner.
Robert Blumofe, executive vice president and CTO at Akamai, expects social engineering, phishing, extortion and AI-driven attacks to dominate the threat landscape. He advised enterprises to use FIDO2-based MFA, zero trust, microsegmentation and API security to reduce risks.
Alex Zeltcer, CEO and co-founder at nSure.ai, believes more companies are using AI and gen AI to create synthetic data that will be used to identify fraudulent groups who target online shoppers and gamers. He also observes social engineering at scale, perpetrated by machines, to conduct fraud.
Discover how Merck, a traditional global pharma giant, achieved efficiency by embracing RPA and bots for regulatory documentation. Learn how this technology revolutionized their workflow and what it mean for the future of the pharmaceutical industry.
Four major cloud providers - AWS, Google, Microsoft and Oracle – will participate in a $9 billion U.S. Department of Defense remote computing contract, marking a departure from an earlier winner-take-all approach that ended up in court and slowed the DoD's cloud transformation program for years.
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