BY Ann Longmore-Etheridge
Research commissoned by Courion and conducted by Onepoll has found that "Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) and IT managers may be too confident in their capabilities to ensure their organisations' security and defences against a data breach. A majority (63 percent) of IT security managers believe it is 'easy' to govern staff access rights and privileges, despite the fact that 42 percent admitted they either do not have or are unsure of their ability to monitor and prevent breaches caused by accidental or deliberate staff actions.... The survey also confirmed the pressures IT managers and CISOs face in managing data security, with 45 percent saying their organisation had suffered a data breach. Any confidence they may exhibit masks fears over job losses (42 percent), severe reprimands (41 percent) and demotion (34 percent) if their organisation suffered a data breach."
www.securitymanagement.com
The Homeland Security Science and Technology (HSST) Program at UDC has a two-fold thrust: to increase the number of underrepresented minorities in Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology priority research areas and to develop an institutional research infrastructure in the DHS S & T social and behavioral sciences priority research area.
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