Without trust, we can’t have security. But the growth of the digital economy, and the wider online world, is changing our idea of trust.
A lot of the ways we identified and trusted the people, and organisations in the physical world are not easy to replicate online.
And, as well as removing the human traits that help us to establish trust – from eye contact or a handshake, to a tone of voice – it's becoming harder to identify if another person is who they say they are. In fact, it's now hard to be sure if they are a person at all.
Digital trust is one answer. And our guest this week is an expert in the field. Rolf von Roessing is one of the lead authors of ISACA's digital trust framework. And, as he explains to Stephen Pritchard, understanding digital trust will be ever more important to any organisation that operates in the digital world.
Ransomware: should payments be banned?
Cloud security: an identity problem
The end of passwords?
Critical National Infrastructure: changing threats
DORA: one year to go
Cyber governance: a new UK code of practice?
Web apps and security weaknesses
Security in 2024: AI, skills, and a seat on the board
Security Insights: 2023 year in review
Cyber: crime’s digital economy
Quantum computing: a security risk?
The Cyber Resilience Act: a law with unintended consequences?
Open source: a security risk?
Automation and the cybersecurity skills gap
Cyber resilience: are we prepared?
Defending healthcare in cyberspace
Cyber war: is it everyone’s business?
Cloud insecurity: leaving the keys in the door?
Biometrics: Eyes in the sky?
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