Oracle Enterprise Data at Risk Seminar – Salt Lake City
| September 10, 2012 |
Salt Lake City UT, United States
Despite successful attacks on databases resulting in more than 1 billion stolen records, fraud headlines, and global regulations calling for data privacy protection, many organizations have yet to put in place the controls needed to protect sensitive data throughout the enterprise. Read more »
SSWUG.ORG’s free virtual expo will review ways for information technology (IT) professionals who work with enterprise environments to design and monitor security for database systems.
This ethical hacking training course is a journey into the hacking mindset, examining and practically applying the tools and techniques that hackers use.
The functionality required by end-users and business process owners with the applications they utilize and manage has always been the primary consideration in most software development endeavors. The result of which is often the lack of security when the software or application is being developed and thereafter released into production. With less secure software, several risks abound and the last several years have seen malicious attacks in the form of SQL injection, buffer overflow, cross-site scripting and various others. Consequently, the application will need to be reviewed, patched, and re-coded to mitigate the software security risks. These time-consuming and resource intensive activities could have been avoided had secure software development principles been applied throughout the life cycle of the initiative.
No matter how much we prepare, we all feel a moment of panic when disaster strikes. For some, that panic quickly passes as he or she gets down to work to fix the problem. For others, the panic continues to grow as he or she searches for a solution.