Heartland Payment Systems

January 20th 2009 was an important date. It was the inauguration of America’s first black president, Barack Obama. It was also the day on which Heartland Payment Systems announced that its systems had been breached. Critics accused Heartland of using the auspicious date to try and bury bad news*.

But if that was the US-based payment processing firm’s intention, it failed. Within days of the announcement, Heartland’s share price fell by 50% and continued its sharp descent into early March 2009, losing 78% of its pre-breach value at its lowest ebb.

Heartland Payment Systems

January 20th 2009 was an important date. It was the inauguration of America’s first black president, Barack Obama. It was also the day on which Heartland Payment Systems announced that its systems had been breached. Critics accused Heartland of using the auspicious date to try and bury bad news*.

But if that was the US-based payment processing firm’s intention, it failed. Within days of the announcement, Heartland’s share price fell by 50% and continued its sharp descent into early March 2009, losing 78% of its pre-breach value at its lowest ebb.

Grading the degree

Bright lights, big cities

Rapid urbanisation is driving the agenda from the boardroom to city hall

Roughly 2% of the global population lived in cities before the industrial revolution; now the figure is closer to 50%. This rapid urbanisation, set to continue at pace, is the “mega trend” having the biggest impact on the big decisions being made by businesses worldwide – more so than ageing populations or climate change.

Bright lights, big cities

 

 

Rapid urbanisation is driving the agenda from the boardroom to city hall

Roughly 2% of the global population lived in cities before the industrial revolution; now the figure is closer to 50%. This rapid urbanisation, set to continue at pace, is the “mega trend” having the biggest impact on the big decisions being made by businesses worldwide – more so than ageing populations or climate change.

Building a global university brand

These are unnerving times for higher education worldwide.

After a four-decade rise in global demand, universities are grappling
with powerful forces colliding at once: reduced government support,
rising public skepticism about the value of a degree, increased
institutional competition and the emergence of disruptive technology.

Citrix employees are free to choose

BYOD, or “bring your own device” policies gained traction several years ago. Employers and employees alike realized the potential efficiency gains to be had by workers using their own state-of-the-art laptops, tablets and smartphones for work purposes, not to mention the cost savings in reducing the need for providing and supporting company-owned devices. Software-maker Citrix was an early adopter of the trend. 

Facebook thwarts intruders

Defenders of today’s corporate networks should put barriers in front of hackers—but get out of the way of employees. So says Facebook, the social-networking giant, which in January 2012 began an overhaul of its approach to network security. The company decided to emphasise network monitoring and rapid response to attacks while minimising onerous security controls that might slow employees.

Priming the pump: Corporate involvement in the classroom

                                 

When Northwestern University launched its new Master of Science in Analytics degree in early 2012, university leadership envisaged a small programme—a tight community of 20 students.  Northwestern received more than 200 applications during the programme’s inaugural year. This year, they have increased the size of the programme by 50% to 30 students and have received over 380 applications

Big data getting bigger: What the Internet of Things means for data

The amount of information flowing across networks has mushroomed in recent years, and its varieties multiplied, thanks to the growth of social media, peer-to-peer websites, mobile Internet use and other modes of digital communication. Data is now termed “big” not only due to its enormous quantities and multiplicity of types (photos and video, for example, in addition to conventional spreadsheet data). “Big” also refers to the potential opportunities for organisations that can mine the data mountains and extract the insights they contain. 

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