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Notifications can signal security events, policy changes, and required responses, helping organizations detect incidents and manage cyber risk.

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Notification in information security is the delivery of an alert about a security event, required action, system change, or confirmed incident. Notifications may target security teams, administrators, users, regulators, or affected individuals and can use email, messaging, phone, or monitoring dashboards. The term covers both automated technical alerts and formal communications about incidents or privacy impact.

Notifications support detection and incident response by directing people to investigate, contain, or remediate a problem. Their security depends on trustworthy event sources, authenticated delivery channels, clear severity and ownership, and records showing when messages were sent and acknowledged. Attackers may spoof alerts, interfere with delivery, or exploit exposed notification content; poorly tuned systems can also create alert overload that obscures important events. Notifications involving personal data should disclose only necessary information, while external incident notices must meet applicable legal deadlines and accurately describe known effects without overstating unconfirmed facts.

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Many things have changed since 2018, such as the names of the companies in the Fortune 100 list. But one aspect of that vaunted list that hasn't shifted much since is that very few of these companies list any security professionals within their top executive ranks. The next time you receive a breach notification letter that invariably says a company you trusted places a top priority on customer security and privacy, consider this: Only four of the Fortune 100 companies currently list a security professional in the executive leadership pages of their websites. This is actually down from five of the Fortune 100 in 2018, the last time KrebsOnSecurity performed this analysis.