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Add This to Your IR Plan Before It’s Too Late

Add This to Your IR Plan Before It’s Too Late

As the Scout motto states: Be prepared. Whether you’re camping in the woods, training for the Olympics, or practicing for a cyber incident, preparation is essential. With data security in general and incident response in particular, CISOs must ensure all members of the organization participate in monthly or quarterly table-top exercises. The traditional model – requiring employees to watch a training video once a year – is insufficient. Table-tops and incident training scenarios, while time consuming, are more than a best practice. They are essential for proper incident response preparedness.

A Conversation with Morgan Wright

A Conversation with Morgan Wright

Morgan Wright, Chief Security Advisor at SentinelOne, is an internationally recognized cybersecurity strategy, cyberterrorism, identity theft and privacy expert. Previously, Morgan was a Senior Advisor in the US State Department Antiterrorism Assistance Program and Senior Law Enforcement Advisor for the 2012 Republican National Convention. His landmark testimony before Congress on Healthcare.gov changed how the Government collects PII and PHI. Morgan is also co-host of Game of Crimes, a long form true crime podcast.

Why CISOs Should Just Say “No” to Legacy Software

Why CISOs Should Just Say “No” to Legacy Software

Too often organizations play roulette with their legacy systems, which is fine until it’s not. If organizations can’t kick their legacy software habit, they better be prepared to protect it. CISOs will inevitably need more budget to maintain the software and protect the data within it, which may ultimately cost more than the more current version. Given the higher risks and costs, CISOs should just say “no” to legacy software.

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