1、Data SecurityResilience,talent,privacy and how to stare down the threats of industrialized cybercrimePredictions 2023Splunk Data Security Predictions 2023|02Only the Resilient SurviveTheres a shift in security conversations this year.At the business level,were talking less about an organization bein
2、g“secure,”and more about it being resilient against supply chain disruptions,pandemics and severe climate events,economic uncertainty,and yes,the seemingly infinite number of cybercriminals probing every aspect of what used to be called your perimeter.Splunk Data Security Predictions 2023|03The focu
3、s on resilience is changing the role of security leaders in their organizations.These discussions vary based on many factors,most notably the maturity level of the organization.Long-established legacy orgs have a harder time adopting a new approach,be it AI-driven automation,a zero trust framework o
4、r DevSecOps practices,while fresh-faced startups may have never done it any other way.“The other day,a customer told me,DevSecOps is our holy grail,but were stuck in dev-ops-sec,in that order,right now,”says Simon Davies,senior vice president and general manager of Splunk in the Asia-Pacific region.
5、“And at the same time,”says Dhiraj Goklani,Splunks vice president of observability in APAC,“there are cloud-native organizations that were in the DevOps mode from the start,and they have almost no choice but to think of this level of integration.”We see those different realities across Europe and th
6、e Americas as well.But at organizations where performance and security monitoring are advancing with increasing collaboration,“resilience”is coming to the fore.“Resilience is also a common theme on the observability side,”says CEO Gary Steele,who joined Splunk in 2022 after nearly two decades as fou