The reality is that critical infrastructure, operated by federal, state and local agencies, is getting hit by increasingly frequent ransomware attacks.
VNQ Systems and Rubrik are hosting an interactive free webinar discussion on ensuring your company is safe from ransomware on 7 October.
A guide and checklist for comprehensive protection.
ITWeb, in partnership with Veeam, is running a survey on data resilience readiness among businesses in Africa.
The survey aims to explore just how prepared these businesses are to recover from a ransomware or cyber attack, as well as the resources they have at their disposal to help them recover.
In this survey, we examine, among other things:
By completing the questionnaire, you stand a chance to win a Takealot or Amazon gift voucher to the value of R5 000.
The detailed results of the survey and the winner of the lucky prize draw will be published on ITWeb.
Thank you for participating!
Due to how variable Android implementations are regarding access to the data source, a build.prop file might not be available in a particular forensic extraction.
MSPs managing customer backups with Redstor’s cloud-native solution can now use Bocada’s single pane dashboard to oversee these environments alongside those protected by other cloud, on-premises or hybrid implementations.
The seven-week online courses have an intake each month.
FNB, Absa, Standard Bank and African Bank are some of the banks that make use of Debt-IN’s services and have confirmed the impact of the ransomware attack on their businesses.
By drawing on AI’s data matching and analytical power and its tolerance of inaccuracies, customer data platforms can collect data from all existing legacy systems.
Tintri would argue that, in the IT arena, sometimes companies need to embrace a philosophy of ‘more is more’, says Michael Donaldson, Tintri product manager at Networks Unlimited.
Enterprise content management allows for workflows to continue and to transact better and faster, says Randy Moche, sales manager at ELO Digital Office Africa.
Debt-IN Consultants says it is suspected that personal information of more than 1.4 million South Africans was illegally accessed from its servers in April.