The majority of companies deploying cloud computing solutions have no cloud-specific security policies and procedures in place and have no measures to approve or evaluate cloud applications that use ...
Cloud computing has taken the IT world by storm, fundamentally changing the way organizations approach IT. The cloud has brought promise of financial and business benefits including reduction in IT ...
Cloud adoption is on the rise across the U.S. government, and federal spending on cloud computing is projected to reach $23.5 billion by 2027. This trend is driven in part by regulatory and executive ...
Last year, the U.S. government spent $12.3 billion on cloud services. That figure is estimated to grow to $16 billion this year. The question before the federal government today is whether that ...
Black Hat Conference—Traditional cloud security issues often associated with cloud service providers (CSPs) are continuing to decrease in importance, according to the Top Threats to Cloud Computing ...
The Banking, Financial Services, and Insurance (BFSI) industry is undergoing a profound transformation driven by the adoption of cloud computing. The move to the cloud offers unparalleled benefits in ...
The cloud computing landscape is undergoing a radical transformation as security breaches become increasingly frequent and sophisticated. NexQloud Technologies, Inc. stands at the forefront of this ...
Oxford University researchers used an approach dubbed “blind quantum computing” to connect two quantum computing entities in a way that is completely secure. Businesses are one step closer to quantum ...
The race for dominance in cloud computing and artificial intelligence (AI) is heating up, and China is pulling ahead with aggressive tactics. If the U.S. doesn’t step up now, we risk losing our ...
Cloud computing offers lots of benefits, but improved security is not one that makes many IT lists. In fact, many — perhaps even most — IT pros still believe that cloud computing means a huge step ...
Ever heard of hybrid matter-photon implementation of verifiable blind quantum computing? No? Neither had we, until today. But it could just be what will make next-generation quantum computers securely ...