Join IBM i CTO & Chief Architect/IBM Distinguished Engineer Steve Will and IBM Power Champion Tom Huntington on July 18th to hear their unique perspective on the direction of this platform.
How important is a zero-trust approach to ensuring effective cybersecurity in the work-from-anywhere era? Steph Charbonneau answers the editor’s question in Intelligent CISO.
Consumer privacy legislation is a critical foundation in protecting the rights of consumers and ensuring their safety and privacy online. Many countries around the world have already adopted comprehensive legal protections for personal data.
Adam Strange illustrates the pitfalls of information security architecture and explains how shifting to data-centric strategies will protect data at file level throughout its entire life cycle.
Data Classification solutions help companies understand and manage their data, however, in this era of regulatory obligation, a "one-size-fits-all" solution doesn’t provide the granularity or flexibility needed to remain compliant.
India’s data privacy regulations are currently undergoing an overhaul. A new law, the Personal Data Protection (PDP) Bill, has been proposed and is likely to be phased in shortly. What does this mean for organizations in India?
Fortra has published its seventh annual IBM i Marketplace Survey. It shows that use of the IBM i platform has surged during the pandemic. What makes this growth more interesting, is that most of the growth has been on-premises or in private datacentres not in the cloud.
Fortra has published its seventh annual IBM i Marketplace Survey, exploring how organizations use the IBM i platform and the IT initiatives it supports. Security concerns intensify with challenges over remote worker access.
Skytap has partnered with Fortra to bring Robot HA to the public cloud, accelerating the movement of IBM i data to the cloud, keeping it synchronized, and ensuring high availability and disaster recovery capabilities for IBM i applications running in Skytap.
Despite all the IBM i security vendors that Fortra has bought over the years--and there have been at least five of them--the company has lacked one key security capability valued by enterprises: encryption.