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The
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act protects non-public financial
data. Data stored on computers that even have a remote
possibility of containing information such as social
security numbers, credit card and financial account
numbers, account balances, and investment information
must be protected.
At what cost does protection come,
and what exactly is it protecting against?
During the this webinar session we
will explore foundation building concepts behind Information
Risk Management and how to calculate Return on Investment
for security spending. We will discuss the basic elements
of Information Security and how to start a regulatory
compliant security program.

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Few industries have
a greater need to secure integrity and privacy of
information than financial services. Obliged to comply
with regulations such as the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act, financial institutions
are under more constraints to secure private information
than ever before.
Learn how you financial
institution can use Data-in-Motion technology solutions
to supplement, enhance and validate manual privacy
efforts such as authored policies and procedures.
Documented procedures cannot prevent an employee from
accidentally or maliciously sending private information
through e-mail or Instant Messaging. Manual procedures
cannot prevent an employee from posting confidential
customer information to a third party web site unsecurely.
Because employees are the weakest link in protecting
confidential data; the use of data-in-motion monitoring
can effectively and automatically prevent data loss.
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Data-in-Motion
Prevent confidential information "leaks".
Data-at-Rest
Find and protect confidential information stored
on latops, workstations and servers.
E-mail
Encryption
Send confidential information securely via e-mail.
Disk
Encryption
Encryption for individual files or whole disk.
e-Discovery
Discover confidential information stored throughout
your network.
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