How Agencies Can Protect Data and Enhance Cybersecurity
Cybercriminals see new opportunities to attack agencies by exploiting unsecured cloud-based services that were deployed as part of the shift to remote-work.
Cybercriminals see new opportunities to attack agencies by exploiting unsecured cloud-based services that were deployed as part of the shift to remote-work.
According to a recent IDC report, holistic data management results in a 50% to 61% reduction in exposure to compliance or audit failures and a 44% decrease in annual spending on data infrastructure.
Artificial intelligence is seen as essential to getting more value out of data. But there’s a skills gap.
Agencies are struggling to protect data across workloads, the solution is in simplifying agencies’ data protection strategies.
“The idea of Zero Trust is not new. It goes back 30 years. But the evolution of IT and of the threat actors are making it more important now.”
GovLoop has three tips for agencies hoping to modernize their mainframes without hitting people, process or technology barriers.
Teasing out insights from big data can seem like a daunting task, but it doesn’t have to be with a big data analytical framework.
For anyone who wants to learn data science, including professionals who live amid data scientists, here is a quick tutorial on basic data science terms.
In government, there tends to be more data than agencies think to leverage. A case in point — emails.
Unfortunately, many organizations don’t fully understand the risk of not having a comprehensive data recovery strategy before their data gets lost.