Cybersecurity: When "good enough' isn't enough by: Larry Karisny If superior cybersecurity technologies exist, there is a responsibility beyond corporate profits or government compliance standards that must expedite their use. From the new TV show CSI: Cyber, which offers a view of the complexities of cyber attack investigations, to the seeming insanity of a CEO talking to a CISO about a potential cyber breach, it seems today's cybersecurity approaches are more of a whodunit than a technological detection. Even the whodunit approaches are, at best, time consuming manual assumptions rather than technological real-time security detection of what has really happened.
by: Larry Karisny If superior cybersecurity technologies exist, there is a responsibility beyond corporate profits or government compliance standards that must expedite their use. From the new TV show CSI: Cyber, which offers a view of the complexities of cyber attack investigations, to the seeming insanity of a CEO talking to a CISO about a potential cyber breach, it seems today's cybersecurity approaches are more of a whodunit than a technological detection. Even the whodunit approaches are, at best, time consuming manual assumptions rather than technological real-time security detection of what has really happened.