When Southwest Washington Medical Center in Vancouver, Wash., introduced free wireless Internet access for patients and guests, it used a "defense-in-depth" strategy to address security issues, says Christopher Paidhrin, IT security compliance officer.
To help agencies secure their wireless networks and technologies, the Government Accountability Office came up with eight leading practices. For now, GAO says, wireless networks remain at an increased vulnerability to attack.
In preparation for the holiday season, banking institutions must steer customers -- and employees -- toward best practices for safe online and mobile shopping.
Like other networking technologies, all WiMAX systems must address threats arising from denial of service attacks, eavesdropping, man-in-the-middle attacks, message modification and resource misappropriation.
As healthcare organizations make broader use of wireless networks and devices, they must develop an aggressive risk management plan to address security threats, says security expert Rebecca Herold.
Mobile banking offers should be about consumer desire and reaching a customer and member base that may have been missed by traditional banking services.
Self-service, enhanced privacy, cloud-based services - these are among the trends that will shape banking over the next decade. What can banking institutions do now to prepare?
Healthcare organizations offering free Wi-Fi service to patients and guests need to take multiple security steps, says security expert Christopher Paidhrin
Jason Rouse, security consultant, says financial institutions can overcome the mobile security challenges with a little foresight and structured technology.
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