Remove 2006 Remove Retail Remove Risk
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MY TAKE: DigiCert and Oracle partner to extend digital trust and scalable infrastructure globally

The Last Watchdog

Amazon had introduced Amazon Web Services in 2006 and Microsoft Azure became commercially available in 2010. Our focus has been on reducing the risk of business disruption, protecting attack surfaces and delivering identity-based digital innovation with ease.” Back in Silicon Valley, Oracle was playing catchup.

Cloud 195
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The Ocado fire – when disaster recovery becomes real

IT Governance

Hundreds of firefighters were involved in tackling the blaze; the smoke billowed for more than 48 hours, darkening the Hampshire sky; surrounding homes and businesses were evacuated due to the risk of explosion, and those further afield advised to keep windows and doors shut; and some firefighters needed treatment for smoke inhalation.

Retail 96
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Retailers must upgrade online credit card processing security by June 30

Data Protection Report

By June 30, 2018, retailers accepting digital (online) credit card transactions must cease using encryption protocols known as SSL or TLS 1.0. Retailers must transition to TLS 1.1 was issued in 2006, and TLS 1.2 Retailers using third-party processors should check to make sure the processor will meet the deadline.

Retail 40
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IBM X-Force Exchange Threat Intelligence Platform

eSecurity Planet

Product History Internet Security Systems developed X-force in 1996 and ISS was later acquired by IBM in 2006, after which the X-Force brand became part of IBM Security. One retailer, noted Dillingham, replaced multiple threat intelligence feeds with X-Force Exchange to dramatically reduce their investigation time.

Retail 97
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More than half of consumers would consider legal action if their data was compromised during a breach

Thales Cloud Protection & Licensing

Those across the manufacturing and utilities industries had the highest preparedness rates at 91%, while retail had the lowest across both countries at 78%. Retail, Catering & Leisure. The majority (84%) of businesses reported being ‘completely’ ready, with a further 11% being somewhat prepared. Respondent breakdown: consumer.

GDPR 82
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This Is How Walmart Beats Amazon

John Battelle's Searchblog

Strange how the world’s biggest retailer, a place she’s never shopped, seems to know her brand preferences for skin care and chocolate. I mean, why would Walmart risk its reputation stealing her Amazon data? ” Michelle smiles. Despite herself, she relaxes a bit. It was worth at least seeing that report.