Mitigating digital risk

Guidance Software has unveiled EnForce™ Risk Manager, a highly anticipated, new data risk and privacy solution. Using EnForce Risk Manager, organizations can implement a proactive approach to information governance, ensuring that sensitive data is identified, classified and remediated. This allows organizations to reduce their surface area of risk, significantly mitigating potential damage from breaches and improving their ability to comply with global data protection mandates.

  • 8 years ago Posted in
With EnForce Risk Manager, enterprises are able to identify the most commonly compromised data anywhere it is stored, including file shares, email sources, servers, databases and all types of end points. They can then categorize that data for review and validation, and automatically remediate that data through digital removal and other control actions.
 
“The amount of data stored on electronic systems today is growing at an exponential rate. And as we’ve learned from high-profile breaches that compromised sensitive information, including health records and credit card information, the ability to mitigate risk remains challenging,” said Ken Basore, senior vice president of product engineering, Guidance Software. “In conversations with our customers, the need to combine data management, e-discovery, privacy and security, as well as policies, into proactive, corporate-wide information governance has repeatedly arisen. With EnForce, Guidance Software is committed to reducing business risks, decreasing storage and information technology costs, and providing greater peace of mind to our customers.”
 
Key benefits of EnForce Risk Manager include:
  • Protect Sensitive Data – Organizations can identify and safeguard valuable corporate assets – intellectual property, proprietary client lists, trade secrets, confidential information and sensitive customer information – from data breaches, rogue employees, lost devices and human error.
  • Ensure Compliance and Mitigate Risks – Better equip organizations to comply with external data privacy regulations and polices such as HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) and PCI DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard) as well as internal policies.
  • Optimize Storage – By systematically deleting data that is old, no longer needed or has no current business value, organizations can reduce current and future storage costs.
  • Improve Business Intelligence – Organizations can gain insights into the flow of sensitive data as it is used and manifested throughout the enterprise. Removing aged data will leave organizations with higher quality data to help them make more accurate and better informed decisions, driving greater business performance.
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