Remove 2011 Remove Information Security Remove Windows
article thumbnail

Invincea Announces 54 New Enterprise Customers for Its Flagship Enterprise Solution, $8.1M in Advanced Research Contracts for Its Labs Division

CTOvision

A security strategy that only reacts to attacks isn’t acceptable,” said Paul Calatayud, Chief Information Security Officer of Surescripts. “To Invincea’s solutions include an endpoint security software suite and threat intelligence service.

CTO Hire 255
article thumbnail

Productivity is in the eye of the FUDholder - A Screw's Loose

A Screw's Loose

Now let’s be fair, there are definitely some information security issues that occur when you don’t protect your data, but leaving that aside. Windows Phone. ©2011-2012 A Screws Loose. The sad thing is that this view is repeated all the time and has joined the ranks of the most repeated FUD by C levels and below.

Mobile 58
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Eating Elephants - A Screw's Loose

A Screw's Loose

The basics (and please go read the original post) of his post talked about keeping information secure, and how governance coming first can get in the way, while classification was the easiest way out of this mess. Windows Phone. ©2011-2012 A Screws Loose. Uncategorized. Tags Applications. Crapplications. Innovation.

Mobile 62
article thumbnail

The Hacker Mind Podcast: Hacking Healthcare

ForAllSecure

I suppose such things happen, but what I remember was her telling her surprise when the system booted up and the Windows 95 splash screen came up … wait, what? Microsoft, for example, stopped patching Windows XP for security vulnerabilities in 2014. Then nothing. The machine crashed, and the lab tech had to reboot.

article thumbnail

The Hacker Mind Podcast: Hacking Healthcare

ForAllSecure

I suppose such things happen, but what I remember was her telling her surprise when the system booted up and the Windows 95 splash screen came up … wait, what? Microsoft, for example, stopped patching Windows XP for security vulnerabilities in 2014. Then nothing. The machine crashed, and the lab tech had to reboot.