Cyber criminals share information to help one another. Why shouldn't companies?
Patches are not being released quickly enough, and more vulnerabilities need patching each day, says RSA.
Many of the past year's biggest breaches were preventable, says Imperva.
Users need to accept that security breaches will happen and learn how to adapt, says People Security.
There are many lessons to be learned from a security breach, says RSA's president.
Businesses must radically change their thinking about security, says RSA.
An eScan study reveals 80% of Web content is harmful, and malware growth has tripled.
The security vendor' 98 million active customers gave input to help develop the 2012 product.
To display a VB100 logo, a product must generate no false positives when scanning a set of clean samples.
The country is not ready to defend itself against large-scale cyber attacks, says ISG.
The company's Mid-Year 2011 Security Threat Report reveals a 60% increase in malware since 2010.
Key new features include social networking protection, an Autopilot mode and scan dispatcher.
After reaching more than 10 million users in its first week of operation, Google+ attracts the attention of cyber criminals.