If you do business on the Internet these orgs need to learn security is required, that means hiring knowledgeable people and implement what they suggest.
All to often when some security suggestion is turned on, if a high level executive does not like it because it makes them have to do something, it is disabled. I have seen this often many times.
Most people look at security as a drain on the bottom line and/or as something that only gets in the way of performing their tasks.
No, that's not the lesson that companies are learning. They are learning that it's cheaper to run the risk and pay the ransom than it is to implement robust security.
>If you do business on the Internet these orgs need to learn security is required, that means hiring knowledgeable people and implement what they suggest.
I think that's a hard step, even if you manage to make the decision to take it. Arguably I am one of those knowledgeable people, I work in a big techy corporation doing interesting security work. Compared to the numbers of vulnerable companies out there, there simply are not enough of us to go around and being the lone security guy in a cheese factory i
Looks like they did an ok job. They are still running it looks like and all the hackers got was probably sales data. Uncomfortable for gigabyte, but they look to have isolated production from marketing or sales or whatever got hacked.
If you do business on the Internet these orgs need to learn security is required, that means hiring knowledgeable people and implement what they suggest.
All to often when some security suggestion is turned on, if a high level executive does not like it because it makes them have to do something, it is disabled. I have seen this often many times.
Most people look at security as a drain on the bottom line and/or as something that only gets in the way of performing their tasks.
>If you do business on the Internet these orgs need to learn security is required, that means hiring knowledgeable people and implement what they suggest.
I think that's a hard step, even if you manage to make the decision to take it. Arguably I am one of those knowledgeable people, I work in a big techy corporation doing interesting security work. Compared to the numbers of vulnerable companies out there, there simply are not enough of us to go around and being the lone security guy in a cheese factory i
If ransomware criminals were publicly tortured and executed by the government, there wouldn't be a ransomware criminal problem anymore.
You do know that when "hung drawn and quartered in public" was an actual sentencing option that people didn't stop breaking the law, right?