- North America and Europe will total 179 million IoT smart homes by 2024
- 2021 Cybersecurity Trends: The emergence of the personalised attack chain
- Gen Z is defining digital banking. FinTech is listening
- BofA’s goal for digital banking: No customer left behind
- THE GDPR nearly three years on, 5 things you need to know - Security Boulevard
- EU report warns that AI makes autonomous vehicles ‘highly vulnerable’ to attack
Monday, 1 March 2021
“Must Reads” for 1 March
Today’s “Must reads” in banking, fintech, payments, cybersecurity, AI, IoT and risk management include:
Labels:
ACH,
AI,
artificial intelligence,
banking,
compliance,
cybersecurity,
digital banking,
fintech,
IoT,
mobile banking,
neobanks,
payments,
risk management
Saturday, 27 February 2021
What is a cyber attack?
From virtual bank heists to semi-open attacks from nation-states, the last couple of years has been rough on IT security.
A cyber attack is an attack launched from one or more
computers against another computer, multiple computers or networks.
Cyber attacks can be broken down into two broad types: attacks where the
goal is to disable the target computer or knock it offline, or attacks
where the goal is to get access to the target computer's data and
perhaps gain admin privileges on it.
Josh Fruhlinger posting on CSO fills us in on cyber attacks using some of the major recent cyber attacks and analyses what we can learn from them.
Read his article - What is a cyber attack? Recent examples show disturbing trends
Labels:
cybercrime,
cybersecurity,
data breach,
phishing,
ransomware,
Security
Friday, 26 February 2021
Bitcoin Blues
From The Economist
Bitcoin speculators had a jittery week, pushing the cryptocurrency down from a record high. Janet Yellen, America’s treasury secretary, added to the febrile atmosphere when she described bitcoin as an “extremely inefficient way of conducting transactions”. Meanwhile, New York state’s attorney-general branded Tether “fraudulent” and barred the stablecoin—commonly used to buy bitcoin on crypto-exchanges—from trading in New York. Tether long claimed its coin was backed one-to-one by the dollar, but New York concluded that it overstated its reserves and is “a stablecoin without stability”.
The knock to bitcoin was a factor behind a sharp fall in Tesla’s share price. The electric-car maker made a controversial $1.5bn investment in bitcoin recently. Shortly before the cryptocurrency plunged, Elon Musk mused that its price seemed “too high”. The drop in Tesla’s stock at one point wiped $15bn off his fortune.
Bitcoin speculators had a jittery week, pushing the cryptocurrency down from a record high. Janet Yellen, America’s treasury secretary, added to the febrile atmosphere when she described bitcoin as an “extremely inefficient way of conducting transactions”. Meanwhile, New York state’s attorney-general branded Tether “fraudulent” and barred the stablecoin—commonly used to buy bitcoin on crypto-exchanges—from trading in New York. Tether long claimed its coin was backed one-to-one by the dollar, but New York concluded that it overstated its reserves and is “a stablecoin without stability”.
The knock to bitcoin was a factor behind a sharp fall in Tesla’s share price. The electric-car maker made a controversial $1.5bn investment in bitcoin recently. Shortly before the cryptocurrency plunged, Elon Musk mused that its price seemed “too high”. The drop in Tesla’s stock at one point wiped $15bn off his fortune.
Labels:
Bitcoin,
cryptocurrency,
Elon Musk,
Janet Yellen,
Tesla
“Must Reads” for 26 February
Today’s “Must reads” in banking, fintech, payments, cybersecurity, AI, IoT and risk management include:
- Lack of Digital Maturity Threatens Survival of Banking Organizations Worldwide
- 5 Steps to Financial Services App Modernization
- Two banks explain how they’re using biometrics
- Will FinTech bring revolution in the Financial Services Industry?
- Millions of jobs probably aren’t coming back, even after the pandemic ends
- Building a Global Financial Cloud with Banking Partners
Labels:
ACH,
AI,
artificial intelligence,
banking,
compliance,
cybersecurity,
digital banking,
fintech,
IoT,
mobile banking,
neobanks,
payments,
risk management
Thursday, 25 February 2021
The Texas Blackout - A Disaster Foretold
Those in charge of Texas’s deregulated power sector were warned again and again that the electric grid was vulnerable.
More than 4.5 million customers in Texas were without power during the peak of outages in the state, as freezing temperatures hit parts of the country.
In November, when the officials who run Texas’s main electric grid took stock of whether the system could handle the coming winter, they felt confident. There would, even under “extreme conditions,” be plenty of power. But last week, an arctic blast mocked their assessment, freezing in about 40 percent of the grid’s power-generation capacity and throwing much of the state into the cold and dark. How could the state’s energy managers have gotten things so wrong?
Find out HERE - The Texas Blackout Is the Story of a Disaster Foretold - Texas Monthly
More than 4.5 million customers in Texas were without power during the peak of outages in the state, as freezing temperatures hit parts of the country.
In November, when the officials who run Texas’s main electric grid took stock of whether the system could handle the coming winter, they felt confident. There would, even under “extreme conditions,” be plenty of power. But last week, an arctic blast mocked their assessment, freezing in about 40 percent of the grid’s power-generation capacity and throwing much of the state into the cold and dark. How could the state’s energy managers have gotten things so wrong?
Find out HERE - The Texas Blackout Is the Story of a Disaster Foretold - Texas Monthly
“Must Reads” for 25 February
Today’s “Must reads” in banking, fintech, payments, cybersecurity, AI, IoT and risk management include:
Labels:
ACH,
AI,
artificial intelligence,
banking,
compliance,
cybersecurity,
digital banking,
fintech,
IoT,
mobile banking,
neobanks,
payments,
risk management
Wednesday, 24 February 2021
“Must Reads” for 24 February
Today’s “Must reads” in banking, fintech, payments, cybersecurity, AI, IoT and risk management include:
- When bad actors have AI tools: Rethinking security tactics
- Banking and fintech security regulations for 2021
- Combining Three Pillars Of Cybersecurity Security
- The Secret Financial Lives of Consumers that Banks Don't Know About
- What Business Uses Will AI Have in 2021?
- Fintech companies must balance the pursuit of profit against ethical data usage
Labels:
ACH,
AI,
artificial intelligence,
banking,
compliance,
cybersecurity,
digital banking,
fintech,
IoT,
mobile banking,
neobanks,
payments,
risk management
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