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Security Blueprints of Many Companies Leaked in Hack of Swedish Firm Gunnebo

Krebs on Security

The Gunnebo Group is a Swedish multinational company that provides physical security to a variety of customers globally, including banks, government agencies, airports, casinos, jewelry stores, tax agencies and even nuclear power plants. ” It remains unclear whether the stolen RDP credentials were a factor in this incident.

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Turning climate risks into business opportunitiesĀ 

IBM Big Data Hub

In Africa, for example, recurring droughts, floods and cyclones due to climate change might cause crop failures and food insecurity. Substantial repair costs might arise, particularly impacting insurance companies. In India, for example, the states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar are in a region of extreme summers and winters.

Risk 67
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The Internet of Things (IoT): Managing the Data Tsunami

Collibra

Yet along that path there will be numerous obstacles to overcome – chiefly related to data privacy and governance. The Internet-of-Things has the potential to transform a range of industries – from automotive and agriculture through to healthcare, home appliances and insurance services. Data governance holds the key.

IoT 56
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If-Then and Antiquities of the Future

John Battelle's Searchblog

” Or, “If the government had the ability to track everything we do both offline and on, then what might our society look like?” Could we find examples of things currently extant, which, if widely adopted over the next generation, would presage significant changes in the world we’ll be inhabiting?

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If-Then and Antiquities of the Future

John Battelle's Searchblog

” Or, “If the government had the ability to track everything we do both offline and on, then what might our society look like?” Could we find examples of things currently extant, which, if widely adopted over the next generation, would presage significant changes in the world we’ll be inhabiting?

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Robert Reich: ā€œSaving Capitalismā€ From Itself

John Battelle's Searchblog

Most of Reich’s argument turns on this simple premise: The debate between “free markets” and “government intrusion” is a false choice. From banking to broadband, pharma to agriculture, Reich details subtle market mechanisms that concentrate power and capital into the hands of the “new oligarchs.”