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Cyber Security Consulting Services

QuantumSecure LLC is Southern California's emerging leader in cyber security consulting, advisory and audit services.


Welcome To QuantumSecure LLC.

At QuantumSecure LLC our priority is your business's success. We believe that cyber security should enable and bring value to your business, not become a burden to it or break your budget. Your business success and security are our number one priority.

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Experience

Educated and certified, with years of experience helping clients worldwide implement security best practices and data protections for their organizations.

Business Success

We believe cyber security should enable and secure your business, not burden it or break your budget.

Industries

We have helped organization across a wide variety of industries, from retail, to tech, healthcare, manufacturing, hospitality and government. We are experts in your field.

Cutting Edge

We stay ahead of the latest cutting-edge information technologies, industry trends, standards, regulations and best practices, transforming that knowledge into security value for your business.

Codrut (Cody) Firuta

President, Chief Executive Officer


MBA Cyber Security,

BSc. Information Systems Management,

CISSP, CSSLP, CCSK, ISO 27001 Certified

Free Evaluation


Sound cyber security services are based on years of training, hard work, and passion, as well as familiarity with the latest compliance frameworks, standards, industry best practices, legislation, precedent and sound consideration. You’ll find all that and more at QuantumSecure LLC. 

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Cyber News


28 Jan, 2024
Zero-day exploits, supply chain attacks fuel 72% increase over previous record for incidents of compromise. Another increase is expected for 2024. 
26 Jan, 2024
2023 was a record-breaking year for data compromises – and that's not a good thing. In its latest yearly report, the San Diego-based Identity Theft Resource Center said there were 3,205 data compromises in 2023, a 78% increase from 2022 and a new record, topping the previous all-time high of 1,860 set in 2021. In 2023, there were also more than 353 million victims of ID theft, according to the center, a nonprofit organization that assists consumers when they have become victims and advocates for better protections for consumers and businesses. That's a decrease of 16% from 2022, which is consistent with a general trend of the number of victims dropping slightly each year "due to organized identity criminals focusing on specific information and identity-related fraud and scams rather than mass attacks," the organization said. Start the day smarter. Get all the news you need in your inbox each morning. Notifications of data breaches without information on the rise The number of data breach notices without specific information such as what happened, what the company has done to correct it, or what steps have been taken to make sure the breach doesn't happen again has nearly doubled year over year, said James. E. Lee, Identity Theft Resource Center's Chief Operating Officer. In 2023, more than 1,400 public breach notices did not contain such information. "That's a problem and that creates risk for other businesses who could be attacked in a similar fashion and consumers who need to know how to protect themselves," Lee said. There is no federal law that requires companies that have had a data breach to notify their customers or consumers more broadly, Lee said. There is instead a patchwork of state laws and federal regulations, with different requirements, he said. For instance, there is a federal regulation that any publicly traded company that has a data breach must notify consumers, but only 11% of data breaches last year would have qualified, Lee said. "Every state has a different definition of what is a breach. Every state has a different trigger for when you have to send a notice. Every state has a different requirement for what information you include and who has to be notified," he said. It took until 2018 to have all 50 states pass a data-breach law and they're all over the board, Lee said. Many laws don't have penalties for the company that had its information lost or breached and allow that organization to determine its risk and if it needs to notify consumers, Lee said. Generally speaking, where the company is located is where the state law controls the notification, regardless of where affected consumers live, he said. "But that's one of those things that we need to update because data breaches, just like data criminals, don't recognize those little imaginary (state) lines," he said. ID theft and taxes: IRS struggles to get tax refunds to nearly 500,000 victims of ID theft Supply chain data attacks are on the rise A growing target of data breach attacks by criminals is within a supply chain of a company and its sometimes smaller suppliers, Lee said. "The criminals will attack a smaller organization that works for big companies," said Lee. Usually, those companies don't have as tight of security measures, but it still gets the criminals the bigger data they want, he said. "For an identity criminal, that's Nirvana. I can pick one company and get the company that has hundreds if not thousands of companies (access to information)," Lee said. Criminals are also ramping up what's called "zero-day attacks," which is an unknown flaw in a company's software to get in, Lee said. Even the guys who wrote the software don't know the flaw is there "and the bad guys find it," said Lee. How do you protect yourself from data breaches or ID theft? While there isn't a lot a consumer can do to prevent a company from becoming a data breach victim and therefore the consumer from becoming a target as well, Lee said there are ways consumers can protect themselves – especially before a data breach. Here are some tips from the ID Theft Resource Center: ◾ Freeze your credit with all credit bureaus, as a protective measure. Find out how to freeze your credit and other tips at www.idtheftcenter.org ◾ Change your password and switch to a 12-plus character passphrase. ◾ Enable two-factor authentication (with an app, if possible) on your accounts. ◾ If you are offered a passkey option from a website or your phone, which is beyond a password and can be fingerprint or facial ID options, take them. ◾ Keep an eye out for phishing attempts that claim to be from the breached organization. ◾ Follow the advice on the data breach notice offered by the impacted company. ◾ Change the passwords of other accounts with the same password as the breached account. Source: USA Today
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