The iRhythm Breach Puts Vendor-Hosted Health Data Under Review
iRhythm's disclosed incident is a reminder that sensitive health data often lives outside core clinical systems. Owners should ask who tracks third-party apps, access, and evidence after a breach.
SD-WAN Patch Tickets Need Evidence, Not Assumptions
Cisco's SD-WAN Manager advisory gives business owners a practical reason to ask for proof that remote network management systems were patched, checked, and owned.
New FTC data on imposter scams gives business owners a practical reason to tighten payment, account-change, and urgent-support verification before staff act.
A same-day report on Google AI Overview liability gives business owners a practical reason to decide who monitors AI-generated search claims and who escalates errors before customers rely on them.
AI Data Center Growth Needs an Infrastructure Reality Check
A same-day Business Insider report on local resistance to data center expansion gives owners a practical reason to review AI, cloud, power, connectivity, and vendor continuity assumptions before critical workflows depend on them.
Відключення адміністраторського доступу потребує доказів до звільнення IT-співробітника
Вирок колишньому IT-співробітнику школи дає власникам і адміністраторам практичну причину вимагати письмове підтвердження, що привілейовані облікові записи, доступ для відновлення та облікові дані постачальників видаляються, коли змінюються IT-ролі.
A same-day Splunk Enterprise vulnerability report gives owners a reason to ask whether their monitoring platform is isolated, upgraded, and backed by proof rather than a closed ticket.
AI Reports Need Source Checks Before They Shape Decisions
KPMG's withdrawn agentic AI report gives business owners a practical reason to require source checks before AI-assisted reports, vendor claims, or internal recommendations drive spending and policy.
Чіткий IT-огляд щодо обсягу, відповідальності, ризику, постачальників і практичних наступних кроків.
A New Jersey DOJ domain seizure under the TAKE IT DOWN Act gives schools, employers, and nonprofits a practical reason to assign ownership for synthetic-image incidents before a crisis.