ENISA Warns of Rising AI Manipulation Ahead of Upcoming European Elections
Top threats targeting the EU are increasingly motivated by a combination of intentions such as financial gain, disruption, espionage, destruction or ideology
Stay updated on the latest in information security destruction: preventing data loss, managing risks, and safeguarding digital assets.
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Background for this topic.
Destruction in information security means permanently eliminating data so it cannot be recovered or reconstructed. This involves methods like physical destruction of storage media (e.g., shredding hard drives) or digital techniques such as secure data wiping and cryptographic erasure. The goal is to ensure sensitive information, including personal data or intellectual property, is irretrievable after its intended use.
Proper destruction is critical to prevent unauthorized data recovery by attackers who might exploit leftover information on discarded or repurposed devices. Inadequate destruction can expose organizations to data leaks or intellectual property theft. Security teams must verify destruction methods meet standards appropriate to the data’s sensitivity and maintain records proving data was securely destroyed to reduce residual risk.
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Top threats targeting the EU are increasingly motivated by a combination of intentions such as financial gain, disruption, espionage, destruction or ideology
Hackers are deploying different ransomware variants, including AvosLocker and Hive, among others
Concerning signs of escalation in tactics
Credit Suisse allegedly attempting to cover up its dealings with sanctioned Russian oligarchs