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2:00

Failure to follow procedures scuppers cybercrime prosecutions

The majority of cyber crime cases go unpunished because investigators fail to follow the proper procedures, says AfICTA.

3:10

Budding hackers help security experts think outside the box

Deep inside Vodaworld, a group of young hackers get to grips with the next generation of security products.

3:30

Security Summit: It's time to make security great again

Reactive defence is not good enough, says Saumil Shah, CEO of Net-Square Solutions.

1:30

Technology doesn't detect attacks, people do

Simulating attacks, cyber threat hunting and attack path mapping are options to look at, says Jacques Louw, MWR InfoSecurity.

3:30

Security Summit: Defence strategies, from someone who robs banks

Stop living in a world where you think no one is trying to attack you, says Jason Street of Pwnie Express.

2:10

It takes almost five months to detect, contain a threat

It gives attackers over 142 days to look at your information, says Rapid7.

1:00

Maths deployed as cybercrime 'street fighter'

Advanced mathematical algorithms catch more attack attempts than AI, says Snode.

1:40

Cyber security standards not doing enough

Security standards are too slow to keep up with the rapid technology changes, says Telspace.

1:50

AI, machine learning needed to combat modern threats

No security team can keep up with the new era of machine threats, says Darktrace's Eleanor Weaver.

2:20

Password days are over

Advanced biometric digital identities are the future, says NEC's Walter Lee.

1:20

Turn cloud risks into opportunity: Lakha

Vodacom security head encourages organisations to use rapid implementation of cloud risks as an opportunity to improve security.

2:50
Jessy IrwinMay 16, 2017

Security Summit: Security practitioners the weakest link

Security teams should avoid externalising risk to users, said security expert Jessy Irwin at ITWeb Security Summit 2017.