The Audit Advocacy Guide
Download PDFThe Internet Governance Guide
Download PDFListen to a lively discussion exploring the Digital Governance Guide. This document outlines the need for digital governance as a means to address the inherent risks of the internet, such as anonymity, misinformation, and cybersecurity threats. It proposes a model for digital governance based on a cycle of risk assessment, governance requirements, conformance program development, and residual risk evaluation.
The guide also details consulting services provided by the Digital Governance Institute to assist organizations in establishing and implementing digital governance frameworks. These services include technology risk assessment, establishing conformance roles, determining levels of assurance, governance framework creation, trust registry governance processes, governance assessment, and outsourced governance operation.
Listen to a lively discussion exploring The Audit Advocacy Guide. This document is a guide to help companies reduce their audit fees. It explains the hidden costs incurred by external audit firms and outlines strategies for companies to become more "profitable" audit clients. The guide highlights actions companies can take to streamline the audit process, such as signing up for multi-year engagements, having an executive sponsor, and using a governance, risk, and compliance (GRC) tool. The document also details the audit advocacy services offered by the Digital Governance Institute, which aims to assist companies in preparing for audits and negotiating lower fees.
Listen to a lively discussion exploring The Internet Governance Guide This document discusses the evolution of internet governance, examining its historical development from the decentralized ARPANET era to the contemporary multi-stakeholder ecosystem. It explores the roles of key organizations like ICANN, the ITU, the IETF, and the W3C, outlining the current challenges facing internet governance, such as conflicting models, the digital divide, cybersecurity threats, and misinformation. Finally, it proposes future directions for internet governance, focusing on issues like digital identity, data authenticity, user empowerment, and the need for a global trust network.
Trust is a human concept. It’s a perception. Trust is relative to risk – and every human has a different risk tolerance based on contextual elements. Some may take extra steps to “trust” someone or an activity, whereas others may take much less steps for the same. Trust also can vary depending on the value of the transaction that they are involved in. A clutch point around trust is that at some point you gain enough confidence in a context to proceed with a transaction or deepening the relationship.
In this podcast hosted by Mathieu Glaude of Northern Block, we discuss the key concepts for creating governance and trust in trusted communication.
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In the episode of the Truth Series hosted by Schellman, Schellman's Chief Knowledge Officer Ryan Buckner sits down with Scott Perry to understand the importance and future of digital identity and trust.
Scott Perry shares this video wth Ron Rodriguez of Amazon Web Services covering a range of security, governance, and audit recommendations for your blockchain workloads. Topics discussed are: Characteristics and Technologies of Web 3, Frameworks and Governance models for Web 3 and Blockchain and Tools and templates that help in the security and compliance posture of your Web 3 application.
This article details why digital verifiability represents a valuable opportunity for entrepreneurs— including exactly how you can go about monetizing this yet unexplored avenue.
This article details the rise of Web 3.0, what exactly it is, how it will be adopted, and what’s stopping it from wider acceptance at this point.
This article explores what a digital asset is—including specific examples—their use cases, risks they pose, and best practices for managing them.
This article addresses what digital identity is, its evolution, and its importance before we introduce the first accreditations that have been announced across the globe.
This article explores three game-changing components of that proposed restructuring of the internet—decentralized identifiers (DIDs), verifiable credentials (VCs), and governance.
This article provides insights about the current market maturity of blockchain before providing 5 reasons why you, as a blockchain provider, should invest in SOC.
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