Resources

On-Demand Webinar

Combine Data Loss Prevention and DRM to Enhance Data Security

The amount of data that companies are generating and its value to day-to-day business is growing exponentially. All that data is then stored and shared, both internally and externally, through all type of means. How can you ensure that sensitive data remains secure without burdening your end users?Organizations need to consider how to implement simple and scalable security solutions for end-to-end...
On-Demand Webinar

The Value of Digital Rights Management

The Value of Digital Rights ManagementIn our highly connected, collaborative economy, you can no longer depend on perimeter-based technologies alone to ensure data confidentiality. Business users need to be able to share files and collaborate on data as a part of everyday business, and risks increase when that data goes beyond your organization’s perimeter.Organizations can depend on a digital...
On-Demand Webinar

Why Pair Data Classification with DRM for End-to-End Data Security

The need to be able to share files and collaborate on data as a part of everyday working is crucial for businesses and their users. This internal and external collaboration, while necessary, presents several security challenges to IT. How much of what users are sharing is sensitive information? Where is it being stored and how is it being shared? Once you have the answers to these questions, how...
On-Demand Webinar

Webinar Acronym Jungle: CASB vs. DLP vs. IRM

There’s so much confusion in the market. How is a CASB different than DLP? Should I first invest in DLP or secure my confidential data with information rights management (IRM)? What should my team prioritize this year?We’re here to help you navigate those challenges. Watch this on-demand webinar, the “Acronym Jungle: CASB v. DLP v. IRM” to learn:The differences between CASB, DLP and IRM data...
Video

GDPR Webinar: 5 Questions About Managing Security Risk Under The GDPR

It’s GDPR’s next big challenge: aligning the priorities of data management with the specific data protection and privacy regulations imposed on your organization. Watch this on-demand webcast where Grant Shirk, VP of Marketing, and the security team discuss how to comply with GDPR clauses covering anonymization, encryption, and system design...
Video

Closing the Content Security Gap

Do you hate the feeling that confidential data is constantly slipping through the cracks in your security? What’s worse is knowing you have no visibility into where PII has traveled, or how your IP is used by partners.Hear four ways enterprises are closing these cracks:4 ways you’re losing confidential dataWhy a data-centric strategy is key to closing the gapWhy CASBs, DLP, and encryption aren’t...
Video

Secure Content Beyond Box

With Digital Guardian Secure Collaboration for Box, we’re enabling organizations to protect enterprise content instantly as it moves around the world. When using Digital Guardian Secure Collaboration for Box, a “Digital Guardian Secure Collaboration Secure Space” is created for users to start securing files simply by saving to Box. Watch this 3-minute video to see the integration in action.
Blog

Data Firm Left Records on 48 Million Individuals Online

LocalBlox, a data firm that bills itself as "a powerful, scalable and distributed data acquisition platform" is the latest company to mistakenly leave data out in the open on a publicly accessible Amazon Web Services (AWS) S3 bucket. The company, based in Bellevue, Wash. left a slew of data online; 48 million records containing information on tens of millions of individuals including names, addresses, and dates of birth. The dataset also included data apparently scraped from Twitter handles, along with LinkedIn and Facebook profiles. Data from Zillow, a popular real estate site, has also been scraped and composited into the dataset. The company was notified of the unsecured bucket by researchers with UpGuard, a Mountain View firm that's had a knack for uncovering data sets like this as of late. The firm notified LocalBlox on February 28 and the bucket was secured later that day, UpGuard said Wednesday. The bucket contained a single 151.3 GB compressed file that decompressed to a 1.2 terabyte Newline Delimited JSON file. According to researchers, who combed through the dataset when they first came across it in a subdomain, “lbdumps,” on February 8, each record is in JSON format.