27% of US office workers would sell their passwords

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CSO Security Awareness Weekly

Mar 21, 2016
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Celebgate: Social engineering used to steal celebrity nude photos

On Tuesday, the Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney’s Office, Central District of California announced that Ryan Collins, 36, of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, plead guilty to violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Read More

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Your Must-Read Stories

27% of US office workers would sell their passwords
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Video/Webcast: EMA Research

Advanced IT Analytics: A Look at Real Adoptions in the Real World

Join IT analyst firm EMA live April 13th @2PM EDT/ 11AM PDT as they discuss advanced IT analytics (AIA) including what is actually going on, who is successful and why. Read More

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27% of US office workers would sell their passwords

In a survey released today, 27 percent of U.S. office workers at large companies would sell their work password to an outsider, compared to a global average of 20 percent Read More

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Why every leader needs to understand Apple vs. FBI

We must avoid any solution that provides a master key to any encryption technology. Violating the privacy of our citizens must remain the exception and not the rule. Read More

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Fitness wearables: Who's tracking who?

Fitness wearables are a growth industry – more than 13 million sold in the U.S. during the past two years. But their security and privacy risks also enable growth in the marketing and identity theft industries. Read More

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How do you break into a private network? All it takes is a free dinner

David Spark asked conference attendees at RSA 2016 how to access their network. What's the secret? The answers might surprise you Read More

White Paper: Paladion Networks

A Framework for Business Aligned Security Monitoring Use Cases

This white paper makes the case and provides a framework for applying business logic to Security Incident and Event Monitoring (SIEM), thereby improving detection capabilities, focusing resources on the highest impact areas. Read More

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