FutureBlog
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Shadow AI: A New Data Security Risk for Organizations
Introduction – AI Adoption Is Outpacing Control These days, artificial intelligence products are widely accessible, affordable, and extremely easy to use. AI has quickly absorbed daily tasks, from chatbots and writing helpers to code generators and data analysis tools. These tools are used by staff members to develop production code, create reports, evaluate spreadsheets, and…
Cloud Audit: Security, Cost Control, and Regulatory Compliance
Introduction – Cloud brings agility, but also new risks The default operating model for modern companies is cloud computing. Rapid scalability, quicker deployment, worldwide availability, and access to modern services that would be challenging or expensive to develop locally are all made possible by it. Teams may experiment freely, expand workloads as needed, and set…
IAM as the Foundation of Organizational Security
Introduction – Identity Is the New Perimeter The traditional security obstacle has been eliminated in today's digital environment. Data can be accessed from various devices and locations, employees work remotely, and apps run on the cloud. Modern businesses can no longer be adequately protected by firewalls and network-based security alone. Rather, the new border is…
Zero Trust Architecture: What It Is and Why It Matters in Modern Cybersecurity
Introduction – The perimeter is gone: now what? The concept of a trusted interior and an untrusted outside served as the foundation for traditional cybersecurity for many years. Using firewalls, intrusion prevention systems, and virtual private networks, organizations created robust digital walls around their networks. A user or gadget was automatically trusted once it had…
Should IT Audits Be a Continuous Process? The Benefits of an Iterative Approach
Introduction – From point-in-time audits to continuous improvement IT audits continue to be seen as unavoidable, stressful events by many organizations. They require a significant amount of time and resources, occur once a year (or less frequently), and often feel more reactive than planned. Teams rush to gather proof, update out-of-date records, and resolve problems…