Businesses are the guardians of our data, and we have certain laws in place to ensure that data is safeguarded. But what happens when those laws are outdated?
Scattered Spider didn’t need zero-days, malware, or a government’s budget to bring a Fortune 500 company to its knees. They didn’t even need to break in. They just logged in.
As employees embrace SaaS tools, often without oversight or approval, the guardrails that once protected company data are starting to feel the pressure. Shadow IT, security blind spots, and compliance gaps have become the new norm, and for many organizations, the risks are far outpacing their ability to keep up.
Artificial intelligence (AI) has rapidly emerged as the double-edged sword of the cyber threat environment. Sophisticated AI models now serve as both potent tools for attackers and vulnerable hinge points for organizations girding against intrusions.
The reduction in CISA’s budget and workforce comes at a time when cyber threats are increasing in volume and sophistication. Private sector teams and state and local agencies must now take the lead in defending their assets.
As government agencies and critical infrastructure sectors increasingly adopt Internet of Things (IoT) devices to enhance operational efficiency, they inadvertently expand their attack surfaces. Proliferation of wireless technologies introduces significant new vulnerabilities.
In today’s threat landscape, security professionals aren’t short on signals. Rather, they’re drowning in them. From endpoint telemetry to user activity to cloud platform events, we’re collecting more indicators than ever before. Despite the volume of alerts, or perhaps because of them, organizations still struggle to detect threats early and accurately.
When surveys show that 70% of SOC analysts experience burnout that adversely impacts their home lives, and 24% of CISOs are actively looking to leave their positions, we can't afford to dance around this topic or sugarcoat our reality.
As the race for real-time data access intensifies, organizations are confronting a growing legal and operational challenge: web scraping. What began as a fringe tactic by hobbyists has evolved into a sophisticated, multibillion-dollar ecosystem driven by commercial data aggregators.
Sysadminds need clarity, not clutter – and right now their systems are getting backlogged with excessive false positives. This is where implementing a vulnerability assessment solution that has the built-in intelligence for in-memory patch awareness comes in.










