XDR: Building a secure future: Cybersecurity strategies for higher education

Logo
Presented by

Jesse Beauman, Deputy CIO – University of North Carolina at Charlotte Tim Burns, Interim CISO – University of North Carolina at Charlotte Helen Patton, Cybersecurity Executive Advisor

About this talk

Universities are becoming increasingly appealing targets for cyber threats like malware, ransomware, and phishing. According to Security Intelligence, in 2022, 89 education sector organizations fell victim to ransomware attacks impacting 44 colleges and universities. Educause lists cybersecurity as the number one IT issue for 2024. With such complex technology and security stacks, SecOps teams at these institutions struggle to efficiently process the intelligence they receive from their tools. Traditional security tools are no longer sufficient to combat advanced threats that infiltrate multiple environments. Given these challenges, how can security teams keep student, faculty, and staff activity secure from increasingly creative and persistent adversaries? In this webinar with Cisco Cybersecurity Executive Advisor Helen Patton, Tim Burns and Jesse Beauman from UNC Charlotte, we will explore: • How higher education institutions can use the latest security tech to defend against advanced threats across their networks. • How a streamlined cybersecurity approach enables SecOps teams to do more with less. • The ways in which an XDR solution improves visibility, equipping security teams to respond to threats quickly and effectively.
Related topics:

More from this channel

Upcoming talks (0)
On-demand talks (99)
Subscribers (10869)
Designed by SOC experts for SOC experts, Cisco XDR simplifies security operations to help security analysts remain proactive and resilient against the most
sophisticated threats. By aggregating and correlating data from multiple disparate detection technologies into a unified view, Cisco XDR enables faster, more
simplified investigations, reduces false positives, and streamlines incident response through clear prioritization of alerts.