A signed document is not always a defensible one. When a transaction carries legal, financial, or operational risk, the real question is not just whether someone signed, but whether you can prove who signed, how that person was authenticated, and what evidence remains if the transaction is challenged.
Organizations spend significant budgets on firewalls, endpoint protection, and access controls. Yet year after year, the most consistent source of data breaches isn't a sophisticated exploit — it's a person making a mistake. And when that mistake involves a sensitive document, the consequences can be immediate and severe.
One of the most underappreciated ways customer data slips out of an organization has nothing to do with sophisticated cyberattacks or dramatic breach headlines. It happens through ordinary business documents — contracts, compliance files, proposals, board decks, customer forms — files that move through normal workflows all day long.
Milk plus chocolate? Better together. Documents plus intelligent security? Better together. Email plus AI to see cybercriminal reconnaissance? Better together.
A few weeks ago, in my armadillo macro-economic mindset, I wrote about the Gartner Hype Cycle for Artificial Intelligence vis a vis xAI. Armand here, RPost’s armadillo product evangelist.
Armand here, RPost’s armadillo product evangelist. I’m proud to share that once again, RPost is on the forefront of innovation. We at RPost today announced the availability of the first ever AI Security Agent making content intelligent.
Armand here, RPost’s armadillo product evangelist, writing from Nashville, Tennessee at the International Legal Technology Association conference.
Armand here, RPost’s armadillo product evangelist. Over the recent few days, we’ve been showcasing a new paradigm in email, document and content security.
It’s been a great 2023 for some. For others, it’s been amazingly frustrating to see the cost of everything seemingly double from where things were a few years ago.
Biometric security is as old as fingerprints first being lifted from crime scenes. The idea, of course, is that there are certain unique biometric signatures we all have.
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