Compliance with regulatory standards and industry-specific guidelines for product security is an indispensable part of cybersecurity. In an age where malicious AI poses a significant threat, how do organizations ensure their product security strategies are not just effective, but also fully compliant? As a part of this series, I had the pleasure of interviewing Nick Kathmann.
1. Have your defenses in order.
2. Embrace the incident.
3. Make sure your operational resilience is strong.
4. Understand where AI is in use within your organization.
5. Increase training across the board.
Naturally, this uncertainty and instability has given some buyers of enterprise IT software pause when considering doing business with smaller, privately held firms. They want to be entirely certain that the cloud service provider they’ve selected to support a critical part of their business will not simply evaporate if the economic forecast worsens.
This has caused many buyers to give public companies the edge during vendor evaluation, simply because doing so feels safer. And it’s true: small, private companies should face more scrutiny than those with proven track records. But avoiding private vendors altogether is just as big of a risk, and — frankly — a mistake.
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