Joseph Liu has worked as a staff accountant at Ernst & Young since 2013, where he has participated in numerous internal control reviews and risk assessments for companies in various industries. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Business Administration from South China University of Technology and is proficient in English and Microsoft Office applications.
Joseph Liu has worked as a staff accountant at Ernst & Young since 2013, where he has participated in numerous internal control reviews and risk assessments for companies in various industries. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Business Administration from South China University of Technology and is proficient in English and Microsoft Office applications.
Stay Ahead of Threats with Advanced Security Protection - FortinetMarcoTechnologies
This document discusses strategies for staying ahead of cybersecurity threats. It begins by noting that cyber attacks have become the top business risk according to the World Economic Forum. It then discusses key aspects of a security program such as understanding the threat landscape, having security frameworks in place, and defining important concepts like roles and responsibilities, data classification, and risk management. The document advocates taking a layered defense approach using tools like web filtering, intrusion prevention, antivirus, and sandboxing. It also emphasizes the importance of shared threat intelligence between security vendors and customers. The overall message is that organizations need comprehensive security programs and strategies to effectively manage evolving cyber risks.
The document discusses the need for concise document summaries that provide the key information in 3 sentences or less. It notes that summaries should highlight the high level topics and essential details while removing unnecessary information to give readers a quick overview. Summaries aim to inform readers of the core substance and conclusions in a brief yet informative manner.
This document discusses the costs of medical errors and efforts to reduce preventable hospital-acquired conditions (HACs). It notes that medical errors may cause up to 98,000 deaths per year costing up to $29 billion annually. Hospitals have little incentive to improve safety due to externalizing most error costs. In response, policies began denying Medicare/Medicaid payments for treatments from certain HACs considered preventable. This policy was expanded in 2012/2015 and may reduce payments to hospitals with the highest rates of HACs. The goal is to incentivize greater patient safety.
Stay Ahead of Threats with Advanced Security Protection - FortinetMarcoTechnologies
This document discusses strategies for staying ahead of cybersecurity threats. It begins by noting that cyber attacks have become the top business risk according to the World Economic Forum. It then discusses key aspects of a security program such as understanding the threat landscape, having security frameworks in place, and defining important concepts like roles and responsibilities, data classification, and risk management. The document advocates taking a layered defense approach using tools like web filtering, intrusion prevention, antivirus, and sandboxing. It also emphasizes the importance of shared threat intelligence between security vendors and customers. The overall message is that organizations need comprehensive security programs and strategies to effectively manage evolving cyber risks.
The document discusses the need for concise document summaries that provide the key information in 3 sentences or less. It notes that summaries should highlight the high level topics and essential details while removing unnecessary information to give readers a quick overview. Summaries aim to inform readers of the core substance and conclusions in a brief yet informative manner.
This document discusses the costs of medical errors and efforts to reduce preventable hospital-acquired conditions (HACs). It notes that medical errors may cause up to 98,000 deaths per year costing up to $29 billion annually. Hospitals have little incentive to improve safety due to externalizing most error costs. In response, policies began denying Medicare/Medicaid payments for treatments from certain HACs considered preventable. This policy was expanded in 2012/2015 and may reduce payments to hospitals with the highest rates of HACs. The goal is to incentivize greater patient safety.