enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. BYOD stands for “bring your own device” and refers to the trend of allowing employees to work from personally-owned devices — most commonly mobile devices — instead of company-owned systems. Why does an organization use BYOD?

  3. What is BYOD? Bring Your Own Device Meaning and Policies -...

    www.fortinet.com/resources/cyberglossary/byod

    Bring your own device (BYOD) means when employees use personal devices to connect to the organization's network and access what they need. Know BYOD Pros, Cons, and Security issues.

  4. BYOD, or bring your own device, refers to corporate IT policy that determines when and how employees, contractors and other authorized end users can use their own laptops, smartphones and other personal devices on the company network to access corporate data and perform their job duties.

  5. What Is a BYOD Policy? - businessnewsdaily.com

    www.businessnewsdaily.com/4526-byod-bring-your-own-device.html

    BYOD (bring your own device) is an office policy that lets employees use personal devices to do company work. Learn the benefits and downsides.

  6. The Ultimate Guide to BYOD Security: Definition & More - Digital...

    www.digitalguardian.com/blog/ultimate-guide-byod-security-overcoming...

    Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) remains both a major opportunity and challenge for enterprises. By following the right approach to identifying BYOD risk and developing effective BYOD policy it is possible to capitalize on the benefits of BYOD without adding significant risk.

  7. The Army Bring Your Own Device initiative helps users stay remotely connected to Army 365 email, Teams, OneDrive, and more from their personal devices, enabling a remote workforce.

  8. BYOD (bring your own device) - TechTarget

    www.techtarget.com/whatis/definition/BYOD-bring-your-own-device

    BYOD (bring your own device) is a policy that enables employees in an organization to use their personally owned devices for work-related activities. Those activities include tasks such as accessing emails, connecting to the corporate network and accessing corporate apps and data.

  9. What is BYOD (Bring-Your-Own-Device)? - CrowdStrike

    www.crowdstrike.com/.../endpoint-security/bring-your-own-desk-byod

    Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) refers to a business policy that allows employees to use personally owned devices for work purposes. BYOD was already common prior to COVID and is now the norm, even for enterprises that were formerly wary of the policy’s potential security risk.

  10. BYOD (Bring Your Own Device): A Comprehensive Guide

    www.kaseya.com/resource/byod-bring-your-own-device

    Allowing BYOD policies enables your company to integrate more mobile devices into its IT infrastructure that are best suited for cloud computing. With this, employees can access critical business applications from anywhere and at any time.

  11. The NIST NCCoE Publishes Guidance to Address Mobile Device...

    www.nist.gov/news-events/news/2023/09/nist-nccoe-publishes-guidance-address...

    The NIST National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (NCCoE) has published the final version of NIST SP 1800-22 Mobile Device Security: Bring Your Own Device . This guidance aims to help organizations address security and privacy concerns with BYOD, the practice of performing work-related activities on personally owned devices.