While users of technology are becoming more educated in how to avoid cyberattacks such as phishing, a distracted user might be more prone to missing signs of social engineering. This project explored whether users immersed in augmented reality applications were more inclined to fall for an on-screen text message that prompted familiarity (such as a friend calling in) or urgency (such as a warning to update software or be subject to an automatic device re-boot within a certain timeframe).
Featuring special guest Sarah Katz and hosted by ISACA's Collin Beder.
Auditee Buy-In—A Key Component of Effective Audits
Breaking Down the ESET T2 2022 Threat Report
Enabling Digital Trust through Canada’s Digital Charter
It’s About (Down) Time
How Social Engineering Bypasses Technical Controls
What Makes Risk Assessments So Unpleasant and How to Change That
ISACA CyberPros – Naomi Buckwalter
Quantifying the Qualitative Risk Assessment
Gaining More Actionable Intelligence Using a Smarter Security Data Lake
ISACA Industry Spotlight | Ali Pabrai
Managing Cybersecurity Risk as Enterprise Risk
Implementing Artificial Intelligence: Capabilities and Risk
Audit in Practice: Auditing Culture
Incident Report & Continuous Control Monitoring
Industry Spotlight - Lisa Young
Defending Data Smartly
Foco de la industria - Arnulfo Espinosa Dominguez Parte II
Ethical AI Shifting the Conversation Left
Foco de la industria - Arnulfo Espinosa Dominguez Parte I
Why (And How to) Dispose of Digital Data
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The Unbelivable Truth - Series 1 - 26 including specials and pilot
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