Book Image

Managing Risks in Digital Transformation

By : Ashish Kumar, Shashank Kumar, Abbas Kudrati
5 (1)
Book Image

Managing Risks in Digital Transformation

5 (1)
By: Ashish Kumar, Shashank Kumar, Abbas Kudrati

Overview of this book

With the rapid pace of digital change today, especially since the pandemic sped up digital transformation and technologies, it has become more important than ever to be aware of the unknown risks and the landscape of digital threats. This book highlights various risks and shows how business-as-usual operations carried out by unaware or targeted workers can lead your organization to a regulatory or business risk, which can impact your organization’s reputation and balance sheet. This book is your guide to identifying the topmost risks relevant to your business with a clear roadmap of when to start the risk mitigation process and what your next steps should be. With a focus on the new and emerging risks that remote-working companies are experiencing across diverse industries, you’ll learn how to manage risks by taking advantage of zero trust network architecture and the steps to be taken when smart devices are compromised. Toward the end, you’ll explore various types of AI-powered machines and be ready to make your business future-proof. In a nutshell, this book will direct you on how to identify and mitigate risks that the ever- advancing digital technology has unleashed.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Part 1: Invisible Digitization Tsunami
Free Chapter
2
Chapter 1: Invisible Digitization Tsunami
7
Part 2: Risk Redefined at Work
16
Part 3: The Future

Cameras everywhere

Most phones today have cameras with higher resolutions than the cameras available to professional photographers a few years back. Contemporary phone cameras offer features such as zoom and can even enhance photographs using automated software. But besides our phones, cameras are appearing in many other places. There are cameras in the office for security, and more and more people have followed this trend in their own homes. Residential communities, malls, and manufacturing facilities have cameras as part of security or productivity monitoring, or to meet regulatory requirements. Cameras on streets to capture traffic offenses and issue fines to offenders are increasingly the norm. It’s a world of cameras everywhere, and it’s quickly evolving – let’s not forget that personal digital cameras appeared only 2 decades ago and were quickly phased out due to the rapid innovation in this space.

Before phones became our primary photo-taking devices...