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Gartner Forecasts Security and Risk Management Spending in India to Grow 12% in 2024

  GenAI-Driven Attacks Require Changes to Application and Data Security Practices and User Monitoring End-user spending on security and risk management (SRM) in India is forecast to total $2.9 billion in 2024, an increase of 12.4% from 2023, according to a new forecast from Gartner, Inc. Indian organizations will continue to increase their security spending through 2024 due to legacy IT modernization using cloud technology, industry demand for digital platforms, updated regulatory environment, and continuous remote/hybrid work. “In 2024, chief information and security officers (CISOs) in India will prioritize their spending on SRM to improve organizational resilience and compliance,” said  Shailendra Upadhyay , Sr Principal at Gartner. “With the introduction of stringent government measures mandating security breach reporting and digital  data protection , CISOs are facing heightened responsibility in safeguarding critical assets against evolving cyber threats.” Gartner a...

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Published on Thursday, 02 August 2012 08:18


Social networking and social responsibility are two terms you do not often hear in the same sentence. However, in the wake of several high profile cases where athletes are stripped of their rights to compete, or legal proceedings are brought against pranksters or a casual remark from somebody frustrated with the delay at a airport, the next generation of social networking systems will have protection mechanisms built in to help people protect themselves.





Today, when we send an email or write a document, the spell checker is intuitive enough to auto correct the commonly misspelt words we use and highlight grammatical errors. With the next generation of social networking tools, we will see the emergence of the virtual assistant. Everyone will have one, a background process, which learns your social networking style over time and adjusts the message you send automatically, so as not to offend anyone.



The assistant will also figure out what times of day you most likely to read and respond to tweets and will prioritize the most interesting ones for you, and bury the ones from your annoying brother in-law at the bottom of the pile. In Twitter 2.0, your assistant will listen to millions of tweets every day and will automatically follow interesting people and un-follow those who are not so interesting.


Eventually the virtual assistant will make the jump into your smartphone and will become the basis of my smartphone preferences. It will replace primitive IRIS or SIRI voice recognition systems and be able to figure out what you mean based upon the language used in other areas of digital interaction with people. As technology advances, this is the natural progression of things to come, a safety net, a time saver and an organizer, all rolled into one, can't wait.


By Angela Sutherland

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