Privacy

Published: Jan. 31, 2019, 1:29 a.m.

Will the privacy outcry and new regulations limit companies\u2019 abilities to do business, or will it span a whole new industry? We discuss building a business in the new age of privacy regulations on this week\u2019s\xa0Defense in Depth.

Chris Jordan, CEO, Fluency Security

This episode of\xa0Defense in Depth\xa0is co-hosted by me,\xa0David Spark\xa0(@dspark), the creator of\xa0CISO Series\xa0and\xa0Allan Alford\xa0(@AllanAlfordinTX), CISO at\xa0Mitel. Our sponsored guest is\xa0Chris Jordan, CEO of\xa0Fluency Security.

Thanks to this week\u2019s podcast sponsor, Fluency Security: \xa0 Fluency\u2019s correlation and risk scoring technology combined with their approach of using pseudonyms in place of certain PII data greatly facilitates your organization\u2019s path towards compliance. Over time, machine learning and artificial intelligence algorithms detect anomalies at an impressive level of scalability. Run Fluency as a standalone or integrate it into your existing SIEM. Learn more by visiting us at booth #4529 at the RSA\xae Conference 2019.\xa0 On this episode of\xa0Defense in Depth, you\u2019ll learn:
  • While new privacy regulations may hamper a company\u2019s ability to collect and sell any data they want, they don\u2019t necessarily stifle the economy. For example, the introduction of HIPAA regulations spawned a growing industry.
  • DuckDuckGo is a search engine that doesn\u2019t collect your browsing history to determine your search results.
  • Even if you are very protective of your data, the people around you probably aren\u2019t. Through relationships and triangulation a profile of you, sans your personal data, can still be created.
  • Because of this ability to triangulate data, your employees\u2019 personal data, outside of work can become a risk to your company.