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| Home > Data governance trends, with expert Gwen Thomas | |
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"Between February 2005 and February 2006, in 130 separate incidents, over 53 million private data records were lost, stolen, hacked, freely given to criminals, or improperly displayed to the public," writes Gwen Thomas, president of the Data Governance Institute, and author of the new book Alpha Males and Data Disasters: The Case for Data Governance. Since then, even more incidents have made the news -- AOL's release of search data, the high-profile Department of Veterans Affairs laptop theft and a host of others. Recently, the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse put the new total at more than 330 data loss incidents, involving more than 93 million individual records, since February 2005. Is there any way to prevent this trend of catastrophic breaches? Effective corporate data governance would be a good start, experts agree. Data governance refers to the overall management of the availability, usability, integrity and security of the data employed in an enterprise. It often has more to do with people, process and politics than with technology tools. In this exclusive podcast, we talk with Gwen Thomas about new data governance trends and techniques. Listeners will learn how to get started with data governance -- without spending a dime on software or consultants. Thomas will offer words of advice to people having trouble getting their companies to take data governance seriously. And, we'll also ask her to explain what's behind her book's title, Alpha Males and Data Disasters: The Case for Data Governance. About the featured expert:
Data governance helps companies comply with regulatory requirements and avoid costly data breaches -- but it's easier said than done. Learn data governance trends and techniques.
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