Monday, 6 January 2020

HP Printer Support +1-888-266-1754 For 123 HP Com Setup

When discussing printers in this article, we are not only talking about the behemoths you see in most large enterprises, but also your low-end multifunctional printers you now find common in regular households. Rare is it to find a printer, no matter how small, that only performs the single task of printing. Most, at a very minimum, provide faxing or scanning and with these come increased memory requirements.123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com Scanning a full document in preparation to print, scanning a document to be saved as a PDF or similar file, or scanning a document to allow faxing all require the ability to buffer the data within the device. A buffer is basically a region of memory that allows the storing of temporary data. Printers use this buffer to store a digital version of the document you are printing, scanning or faxing. Depending on the device, this buffer can range from a small piece of Random Access Memory (RAM) to a Hard Disk Drive like the type found in your desktop or laptop computer. 123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com In larger enterprise printers, this buffer is not the only memory store found within the printer. A larger, non-volatile memory area is provided to store semi-permanent or permanent information. For example, some printers allow scanning of a document and saving it within the printer as a PDF. The user may then connect to the printer as if it were a network drive, or via a web page, and download their document.123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com So where are we going with all this? The leakage or theft of sensitive and confidential corporate information. Large enterprises may have developed and implemented data retention and destruction policies but rarely do these include, or even mention, printers. Companies look at hardcopies of documents, CD's, DVD's and workstation, laptop and server hard drives when developing their data destruction policies.123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com While it is clear they identify hard drives as a source of sensitive information, rarely do they consider the hard drives contained within their printers, if they even know of their existence. Printers are also commonly overlooked when security policies, procedures and guidelines are developed and implemented. Little time, if any, is spent looking at printer security or the implications of not securing the corporate printers. All the more disturbing this becomes when you contemplate the common types of documents that pass through printers in a corporate environment.123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com123.hp.com

No comments:

Post a Comment