Introducing Pulse. Compliant chat messaging system that meets regulations imposed by the SEC, FCC, HIPPA, GDPR and more. Perfect for Regulated Industries and government organizations that need to gain sovereign control over their communication systems. Pulse includes: - Native clients for Android, iOS, Windows, MacOS and Linux. - Escrow functions for compliance - Encryption peer to peer - Journaling for compliance - UX experience similar to consumer APP's - Sovereign control over the infrastructure #sovereigncloud #privatecloud
MailSPEC
Computer and Network Security
When privacy is not optional. Cybersecurity products and services for Regulated Industries
About us
Compliant communications products and services for regulated industries. Organizations trust MailSPEC for privacy technology when it matters most.
- Website
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http://www.mailspec.com
External link for MailSPEC
- Industry
- Computer and Network Security
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- San Francisco, Santa Monica, Paris + Nice France, Tokyo Japan, and Las Vegas
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 2019
- Specialties
- email security and cybersecurity
Locations
Employees at MailSPEC
Updates
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Hapn, a company that sells GPS tracking hardware and software, is reportedly spilling sensitive user information online, and is not responding to researcher alerts or media inquiries, experts have claimed. https://lnkd.in/d9Zz4Mkz
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Platforms promise connection, but often at the cost of your data privacy. Did you know? 54% of users don’t understand what data platforms collect. 62% of businesses don’t review platform privacy policies. This lack of awareness leaves businesses vulnerable. Data breaches aren’t just tech issues; they’re trust issues.
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It’s not just personal accounts at stake anymore. Businesses are increasingly targeted through social platforms, risking brand trust and customer data. What’s trending? Fake executive accounts used to scam employees. Data scraping of public posts for unauthorized AI training. Credential stuffing attacks targeting business profiles. Social platforms need to do more to protect users—but as businesses, we also have a responsibility to protect ourselves. Train your team, audit your platforms, and demand better security from providers.
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Every week, we hear about a new social media vulnerability. Whether it’s location tracking gone rogue or private messages being exposed, one thing is clear: our data isn’t as secure as we’re led to believe. 🔍 Emerging trends: API Exploits: Developers accidentally (or intentionally) exposing user data. AI Misuse: Facial recognition databases being scraped from public profiles. Phishing 2.0: Hackers now mimic platform alerts to steal credentials. How can businesses and individuals adapt? Audit app permissions: Only grant what’s absolutely necessary. Challenge platforms: Transparency reports need to go deeper. Educate teams: A small lapse in judgment can lead to a big breach.
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The data included information like names, birth dates and the last four digits of Social Security numbers. https://lnkd.in/dAvY5ebE
Duke Energy says customer data was breached in May
tampabay.com
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Social media platforms are now the cornerstone of digital life, but with this convenience comes risk. A recent study revealed that over 70% of platforms have unpatched vulnerabilities exposing user data. Why does this matter? Sensitive chats can be intercepted. Private photos may not be as private as you think. Third-party apps can exploit weak APIs. The question isn't just "Are we protected?" but rather "What are we doing to demand better?" As businesses and users, we need to advocate for platforms to prioritize proactive security measures over reactive damage control.
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The update reaffirms the commitment of regulatory authorities across the European Economic Area (EEA) to extensive transparency when disclosing information, both in response to access-to-documents requests and in the proactive publication of data once a medicine is authorised. https://lnkd.in/dhr6ZxrN
A common EU approach to data transparency in medicine regulation | European Medicines Agency (EMA)
ema.europa.eu