@lilanime_potato22: Dont ask, because you well receive 🥸

lilanime_potato22
lilanime_potato22
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Region: US
Thursday 07 March 2024 02:38:39 GMT
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inputwork
Dylan :
Only slightly crazy?? I want more
2024-03-07 03:04:35
5
eddieh361
Eddie :
I want a super crazy gf
2024-10-27 08:27:38
1
dofoofoo
fofo :
Lol
2024-03-07 02:44:22
1
wolf.king375
Wolf King :
Omg yes luv ❤️😍
2024-03-07 13:32:26
3
kushquintero
Ismael :
Beautiful
2024-03-07 02:56:15
1
justspotz
JustSpotz :
Fortnite
2024-03-07 03:35:40
2
zlatkonikolic5550
Zlatko Nikolic555 :
you are just beautiful honey😉
2024-03-07 10:29:19
0
jj41892
Jorgethejungle :
The eyes🥴
2024-03-07 11:50:29
3
206.zb
Zakayo🇰🇪 :
We didn’t mean you btw ✌✌✌
2025-12-22 22:16:20
1
eljunior_v13
Junior🍀🤍🧿 :
😍😍😍
2024-03-07 02:42:50
1
usa_p.1
Po.1.MB :
Let's be friends, I have a surprise for you.🦁🦁
2024-09-18 03:46:37
1
mando.madeit
mandomadeit :
I just don’t want another man around you. Does that make me jealous?
2024-03-09 15:10:09
0
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🔐 Most data breaches don’t start with malware. They start with non-compliance. In 2025, regulatory frameworks like **GDPR** and **PCI DSS** are no longer “legal checkboxes”—they are core cybersecurity controls that directly influence how organizations design, secure, and monitor their systems. If your security strategy ignores compliance, you are already exposed.    Why GDPR and PCI DSS Matter in Cybersecurity Both frameworks aim to reduce risk, protect sensitive data, and enforce accountability, but they address different threat landscapes: * GDPR focuses on protecting *personal data* and privacy rights * PCI DSS focuses on securing *payment card data* and preventing financial fraud Together, they form a powerful baseline for modern cyber defense.    GDPR: Security Through Privacy by Design The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) applies to any organization processing personal data of EU residents—regardless of location.     Core Cybersecurity Principles in GDPR * Confidentiality, Integrity, Availability (CIA Triad) * Data minimization – collect only what you need * Privacy by design and by default * Strong access control and authentication * Encryption and pseudonymization * Continuous risk assessments     Why Security Teams Should Care * Breaches must be reported within 72 hours * Fines can reach €20 million or 4% of global revenue * Poor logging, weak access control, and insecure APIs are common GDPR violations GDPR forces organizations to treat personal data as a high-value asset—not an afterthought.    PCI DSS: Defending the Payment Ecosystem The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) applies to any organization that stores, processes, or transmits cardholder data.     Key Security Requirements * Network segmentation and secure configurations * Strong access control and least privilege * Encryption of cardholder data at rest and in transit * Continuous vulnerability scanning and penetration testing * Centralized logging and monitoring * Incident response planning     Why PCI DSS Still Matters * Card data remains a top target for attackers * Non-compliance can lead to **fines, legal exposure, and loss of payment privileges** * Many real-world breaches exploit misconfigured systems—not zero-days PCI DSS is offensive-security-aware by design—it assumes attackers *will* try.    GDPR vs PCI DSS: A Cybersecurity Perspective | Aspect    | GDPR               | PCI DSS                  | | --------- | ------------------ | ------------------------ | | Focus     | Personal data      | Payment card data        | | Scope     | Privacy + security | Security-first           | | Approach  | Risk-based         | Control-driven           | | Penalties | Regulatory fines   | Fines + operational bans | | Relevance | All industries     | Payment-handling orgs    | Security overlap is intentional—access control, logging, encryption, and monitoring are mandatory in both.    The Modern Reality: Compliance = Security Maturity Organizations that treat GDPR and PCI DSS as “paperwork” often: * Lack asset visibility * Miss lateral movement * Fail at incident detection * Struggle with breach response Organizations that embed them into security operations: * Improve threat detection * Reduce blast radius * Strengthen audit readiness * Build customer trust     Final Thought 🔒 Compliance does not replace cybersecurity—but strong cybersecurity makes compliance achievable. If your controls cannot withstand an audit, they likely won’t withstand an attacker. Are you building security *for attackers* or *for auditors*—or both? Follow for practical insights on cybersecurity frameworks, offensive security, and real-world defense strategies. #CyberSecurity #compliance #GDPR
🔐 Most data breaches don’t start with malware. They start with non-compliance. In 2025, regulatory frameworks like **GDPR** and **PCI DSS** are no longer “legal checkboxes”—they are core cybersecurity controls that directly influence how organizations design, secure, and monitor their systems. If your security strategy ignores compliance, you are already exposed. Why GDPR and PCI DSS Matter in Cybersecurity Both frameworks aim to reduce risk, protect sensitive data, and enforce accountability, but they address different threat landscapes: * GDPR focuses on protecting *personal data* and privacy rights * PCI DSS focuses on securing *payment card data* and preventing financial fraud Together, they form a powerful baseline for modern cyber defense. GDPR: Security Through Privacy by Design The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) applies to any organization processing personal data of EU residents—regardless of location. Core Cybersecurity Principles in GDPR * Confidentiality, Integrity, Availability (CIA Triad) * Data minimization – collect only what you need * Privacy by design and by default * Strong access control and authentication * Encryption and pseudonymization * Continuous risk assessments Why Security Teams Should Care * Breaches must be reported within 72 hours * Fines can reach €20 million or 4% of global revenue * Poor logging, weak access control, and insecure APIs are common GDPR violations GDPR forces organizations to treat personal data as a high-value asset—not an afterthought. PCI DSS: Defending the Payment Ecosystem The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) applies to any organization that stores, processes, or transmits cardholder data. Key Security Requirements * Network segmentation and secure configurations * Strong access control and least privilege * Encryption of cardholder data at rest and in transit * Continuous vulnerability scanning and penetration testing * Centralized logging and monitoring * Incident response planning Why PCI DSS Still Matters * Card data remains a top target for attackers * Non-compliance can lead to **fines, legal exposure, and loss of payment privileges** * Many real-world breaches exploit misconfigured systems—not zero-days PCI DSS is offensive-security-aware by design—it assumes attackers *will* try. GDPR vs PCI DSS: A Cybersecurity Perspective | Aspect | GDPR | PCI DSS | | --------- | ------------------ | ------------------------ | | Focus | Personal data | Payment card data | | Scope | Privacy + security | Security-first | | Approach | Risk-based | Control-driven | | Penalties | Regulatory fines | Fines + operational bans | | Relevance | All industries | Payment-handling orgs | Security overlap is intentional—access control, logging, encryption, and monitoring are mandatory in both. The Modern Reality: Compliance = Security Maturity Organizations that treat GDPR and PCI DSS as “paperwork” often: * Lack asset visibility * Miss lateral movement * Fail at incident detection * Struggle with breach response Organizations that embed them into security operations: * Improve threat detection * Reduce blast radius * Strengthen audit readiness * Build customer trust Final Thought 🔒 Compliance does not replace cybersecurity—but strong cybersecurity makes compliance achievable. If your controls cannot withstand an audit, they likely won’t withstand an attacker. Are you building security *for attackers* or *for auditors*—or both? Follow for practical insights on cybersecurity frameworks, offensive security, and real-world defense strategies. #CyberSecurity #compliance #GDPR

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