Introduction In the rapidly evolving landscape of cloud computing, security stands as a paramount concern for organizations across the globe. Cloud Security Posture Management (CSPM) tools have emerged as crucial instruments to help businesses safeguard their cloud environments from misconfigurations, non-compliance, and external threats. This article delves into the top 10 CSPM solutions, highlighting their… Continue reading Securing the Clouds: The Top 10 CSPM Tools Shaping Cloud Security
Tag: AWS
Cloud Web Application and API Protection Magic Quadrant
The market for protecting cloud web applications and APIs is expanding quickly. You can use this Magic Quadrant to find cloud WAAP providers that provide simple controls and specialised defences against sophisticated bots and changing API attacks.Planning assumptions for the futureCloud web application and API protection platform (WAAP) services over WAAP appliances and IaaS-native WAAP… Continue reading Cloud Web Application and API Protection Magic Quadrant
Serverless Top security best practices
Describe serverless.A cloud execution model is serverless computing. It enables users and developers to create and use applications and services without having to worry about servers. Applications are created more quickly, launched only when necessary, and infrastructure management is no longer necessary. Servers do still exist in serverless, but they are removed from the process… Continue reading Serverless Top security best practices
Voice of the Customer: Web Application and API Protection, Gartner Peer Insights
What is API and Web Application Protection?Web application and API protection (WAAP), according to Gartner, is the evolution of the web application firewall (WAF) market, which now includes four core features in addition to WAF: distributed denial of service (DDoS) defence, bot management, and API defence. Beginning with cloud-delivered WAF services that were simpler to… Continue reading Voice of the Customer: Web Application and API Protection, Gartner Peer Insights
Uber employees believed the alleged teen hacker attack was a joke.
The world’s largest ride-hailing company, Uber, shut down a portion of its operations late on Thursday after learning that its internal systems had been compromised. According to the company, the attacker was able to socially engineer his way into a worker’s Slack account before making a deeper foray into the network. While the full scope… Continue reading Uber employees believed the alleged teen hacker attack was a joke.