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Test your own reaction -or compete against your friends- to an earthquake or cyberattack in our gaming room.
Staff Sgt. Brian Jones, an intelligence analyst with the Texas Army National Guard’s 102nd Information Operations (IO) Battalion, monitors his workstation in Austin during Cyber Shield 17 to counter the opposing team’s efforts to hack into his system. The exercise, which was held last spring and included members of the National Guard from 44 states and territories, the U.S. Army Reserve, state and federal government agencies, nongovernmental organizations and private industry, was designed to enhance participants’ ability to respond to cyber incidents. Across DOD and its private-sector partners, efforts are intensifying to safeguard unclassified technical information against cyberattacks. (U.S. Army photo by Maj. Ray McCulloch, 102nd IO Battalion)
19 October 2010
Woefully unsuitable. And, Gearing up for a new age of uncertainty.
Content Glasgow Herald. © Copyright Herald & Times Group.
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FORTUNE Brainstorm Health 2019
April 3rd, 2019
San Diego, CA
3:45 PM
STARTUPS ON THE ROAD TO REVOLUTION? YOU BE THE JUDGE
Imagine a world where all your critical health data is safe from cyberattacks and affordable pharmaceuticals are available at the swipe of your finger. From patient billing to inventory management and faster drug discovery, hear from some of the world’s hottest startups about how they are transforming the future of health care.
Dave Hodgson, Co-founder and CEO, Project Ronin
Dr. Tim Junio, Co-founder and CEO, Expanse
Dr. Florian Otto, Co-founder and CEO, Cedar
Alice Zhang, Chief Executive Officer, Verge Genomics
Moderator/MC: Ellen McGirt, Senior Editor, FORTUNE
Photograph by Stuart Isett for Fortune
I had some plumbing done recently.... note the delicacy and vagueness of that phrase. I had to take responsibility, but I didn't want to watch or know the details. "Just fix it, please!"
That's how so many of us feel about health care: Don't bore (or frighten) me with the details, but deal with it. I know those pipesare there, but I don't want to mess with them.
This is not my plumbing, for the record. It's the underside of a sink at the Doubletree Hotel in Bloomington, IL, where I am about to give a talk about our relationship with information, for the State Farm insurance company. Insurance is based on lack of knowledge: If you know everything, it's no longer insurance, but cost-allocation, whether over time or over a population. Who should pay the cost of one person's indulgence in unsafe habits? Should a person with a specific genetic risk of diabetes or heart problems pay more to eat a hamburger than someone at low risk? Who should pay for a cyberattack launched by innocent attackers whose machines have been infected bysome remote hacker? and so on..
61% answered "yes," they do trust their bank to keep their information secure.
For more on how to bank safely online and practical answers for your digital life, visit www.JustAskGemalto.com.
Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen (Denmark) is now also reacting to the drone flight over Copenhagen Airport.-
What we witnessed last night is the most serious attack on Danish critical infrastructure to date. This says something about the times we live in and what we as a society need to be prepared to handle
- We certainly do not exclude any options regarding who is behind this. And it is clear that this ties into the developments we have observed recently with other drone attacks, airspace violations, and cyberattacks on European airports.
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FORTUNE GLOBAL FORUM
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Monday, October 27, 2025
12:30 PM – 1:45 PM
LUNCH SESSIONS
HACKING OUR DEFENSES
As cyberattacks become more sophisticated and more frequent, the stakes for companies protect their data and people have never been higher. Leaders in global payments and
enterprise technology will share insights on how threats are evolving—and what’s needed to stay prepared. Topics will include growing risks across regions, the role of AI in both attacks and defense, and why security is as much about people and processes as it is about tools. What does it really take to stay resilient in a world where every vulnerability can become a headline? And what bold moves should leaders make now to harden their defenses before the next breach?
Hosted by Rubrik
Ali Abdulhasan, Founder and CEO, Tap Payments
Pieter Bil, Managing Director, Middle East and Africa, Kyndryl
Michael Martin, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, RapidSoS
Bipul Sinha, Chief Executive Officer, Rubrik
Moderator: Matt Heimer, Fortune
Photograph by Stuart Isett/Fortune
The recent NHS hack highlights just one of the new challenges government faces as it enters the digital age. Digital public services need to be easy to use, secure and save money. But someone needs to be responsible for setting and enforcing standards, driving the improvement of services and safeguarding against cyberattacks. So, who is it?
To discuss this issue, our panel included:
Ciaran Martin, CEO, National Cyber Security Centre
Janet Hughes, Digital Leadership Director, Doteveryone
Bryan Glick, Editor in Chief, Computer Weekly
Daniel Thornton, Programme Director at the Institute, Chaired the discussion and presented new research.
Photos by Candice McKenzie