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Year month, day. Show all references Tags: Corporate Culture Cybersecurity Data Security Digital Leadership Programs Leading Change Privacy Believe Reprinted: More like this The role of culture in driving change Are ubiquitous stores leveraging grassroots automation the new face of retail? Create Miracles with: You logged in to post a comment. First time here? Sign up for a free account: comment on articles and access more articles.
Elsewhere in the magazine's spring issue How frictionless should things be? Additionally, the dark web is the future of the black market for stolen data and the economy. Bruce Posner Year Month Day Reading Time: Minutes Topics Management Technology Marketing Digital Email Lists Database Marketing Security & Privacy Elsewhere Ideas and ideas from other media platforms are worth your attention. More from this series Subscribe Share What to read next Five key trends in artificial intelligence and data science in 2020 How developers can reduce AI’s impact on climate Eight essential leadership skills to improve in 2020 Five tips for one-on-one meetings Editor’s note.
Columns elsewhere highlight ideas from other media platforms that we think deserve your attention. In recent years, technology companies have led the way in making their products and services as easy to use as possible. For many, getting rid of friction, streamlining account login requirements and allowing one-click ordering, for example, is seen not as an option but as a necessity. However, escalating concerns about cybersecurity are prompting companies and many others to rethink how things should work. A New York Times columnist pointed out that reducing complexity has always been a key driver in the development of new technologies. The question now is, is society paying too much for convenience, and specifically, should companies make things less simple for the sake of safety? Ross interviewed more than a dozen technology executives and product designers about the trade-offs between seamless transactions and cybersecurity. What would happen, he asked.
Elsewhere in the magazine's spring issue How frictionless should things be? Additionally, the dark web is the future of the black market for stolen data and the economy. Bruce Posner Year Month Day Reading Time: Minutes Topics Management Technology Marketing Digital Email Lists Database Marketing Security & Privacy Elsewhere Ideas and ideas from other media platforms are worth your attention. More from this series Subscribe Share What to read next Five key trends in artificial intelligence and data science in 2020 How developers can reduce AI’s impact on climate Eight essential leadership skills to improve in 2020 Five tips for one-on-one meetings Editor’s note.
Columns elsewhere highlight ideas from other media platforms that we think deserve your attention. In recent years, technology companies have led the way in making their products and services as easy to use as possible. For many, getting rid of friction, streamlining account login requirements and allowing one-click ordering, for example, is seen not as an option but as a necessity. However, escalating concerns about cybersecurity are prompting companies and many others to rethink how things should work. A New York Times columnist pointed out that reducing complexity has always been a key driver in the development of new technologies. The question now is, is society paying too much for convenience, and specifically, should companies make things less simple for the sake of safety? Ross interviewed more than a dozen technology executives and product designers about the trade-offs between seamless transactions and cybersecurity. What would happen, he asked.