2021 ends with a question: Are NFTs here to stay?
NFTs are the biggest disrupter in art this year, with artists minting, exhibiting and auctioning, and investors buying, selling and trading.
NFTs are the biggest disrupter in art this year, with artists minting, exhibiting and auctioning, and investors buying, selling and trading.
Assuming a fix for its troublesome language, the bill might eventually prove a boon — another sign “digital assets are here to stay.”
Editor's Note: Welcome to this issue of Forcepoint Security News . It's curated news meant to provide a quick look at what's happening around the cybersecurity industry.
Over the past 35 years, we have watched technology go from massive in size and so expensive only large corporations could afford to invest to modern devices as small as…
Welcome to the fifth and final post from Forcepoint's Future Insights series , which offers insights and predictions on cybersecurity that may become pressing concerns in 2022.
Developed in collaboration with the commercial department of the Financial Times, this series takes a deep dive into the market sentiment and outlook of the emerging NFT market.NFTs - the…
Today we are extending data loss prevention (DLP) to more security vectors, interfaces, and data locations for even more precise control of your data where it resides and how it…
The transformation of the workforce has already happened, but now businesses and organizations around the globe need to pivot from the short term decisions they made during the pandemic and…
In his latest book, ‘Platform Revolution,’ Don Tapscott explains how blockchain technology has converged with AI, machine learning and IoT.
NFT digital art sales generate headline after headline, though this is not the real mass-market use of this novel technology.