Cybercrime takes many forms, including fraud, money laundering, and theft of goods, sensitive data or intellectual property – and poses significantly greater risk to most organizations than traditional security threats. Instead of being aimed at the IT infrastructure itself, it typically involves the manipulation and hijacking of complex transaction processes taking place over an increasingly complex IT infrastructure.
Because most companies rely on device-centric approaches to security monitoring, they are ill-equipped to defend against the cybercrime onslaught. Joe Magee (Vigilant) and Brian Contos (Imperva) exchange views on the common attributes of cybercrime, and discuss sample cybercrime methods and countermeasures.
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