When systems fail, it’s important to have a plan to replace lost resources however and from wherever you can source them, as the embattled country has learned over more than a decade of conflict.
This is the final piece in the series titled “Virtual Dominance: How a cyber charter school has upended K-12 education in Pa.
When the lights stayed on in Kyiv during a wave of missile attacks in early 2024, Ukrainian officials quietly acknowledged a second line of defense that received far less public attention than the ...
Last month, Paul Hastings sponsored the Cybersecurity Law Workshop at the Spring Privacy & Security Forum held at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. The ...
Nevada CIO Timothy Galluzi, who steered the ship in the wake of a major cyber incident earlier this year, said officials in the state will build on lessons learned during the recovery in the year ...
This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community. As 2025 draws to a close, Finextra looks back at the most ...
A top Pentagon official talks about how real-world conflicts around the world have helped informed U.S. cyber defense strategies 7 months ago ...
Jaguar Land Rover built its modern reputation on sophisticated engineering and connected luxury, but a single cyber incident ...
To no surprise, ransomware continued to disrupt organizations across every sector in 2025. Although each incident looked different, most shared the same root causes: weak access controls, overly ...
2025 was a wild ride for cyber security. The landscape is shifting faster than ever, and several themes stand out when I think about the most important cyber security lessons from the year.
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min Kettering Health CEO Michael ...
“Our teams have to be representative of those we serve, and that’s one of the biggest opportunities we have in this industry,” said Cisco’s Dug Song.