Sixty-eight percent of system administrators say their organisations have faced increased risk of cyber security attacks due to the shift to remote work.
Serve, enable, question, listen, engage and empower should be the new management mantra of data architecture that leads to a continual, virtuous cycle.
POPI compliance delivers intangible benefits, including the fact that customers want to engage and transact with trusted, reliable and responsible providers.
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!
In a world prioritising agility and speed to market, businesses today are challenged in balancing doing it fast, doing it well and doing it securely, says Professor Herman Singh, CEO of Future Advisory.
Artificial intelligence and machine learning are useful tools in a war chest to improve a host of processes, not least customer service.
Artificial intelligence has the capabilities to address the concerns that hamper adoption: data quality, data silos and the ability to explain how it arrived at a decision.
The foundation provided the data and smartphones SADAG needed across its various offices and helplines countrywide.
The collaboration sets the tone for Tessian’s channel-based roadmap and Nclose’s goal to provide extensive security services to global organisations.
CloudSmiths worked in collaboration with The Sustainability Initiative of South Africa to upgrade the organisation’s legacy platform to a customised cloud-based solution – MySIZA.
Adoption of and trust in cloud technology mushroomed in the past year, as businesses sought to adapt to the rapidly changing world wrought by COVID-19.
Research finds data breaches now cost local companies $3 million (R46 million) per incident on average − the highest rate in six years.