Infosec stories
The addition could help organisations prioritise critical systems after an attack, cutting recovery from days to minutes and limiting breach damage.
Independent testing suggests enterprise AI can be deployed without exposed inbound ports, easing security concerns for firms handling sensitive data.
Identity and data protection tools are taking a larger share of European security budgets as older perimeter products lose ground.
Security teams can now automate exposure fixes and reporting as Tenable makes Hexa AI generally available to Tenable One customers.
Cybersecurity buyers may see faster response times, as the guide spotlights Group-IB among providers offering round-the-clock support and preparedness work.
Attackers still exploit basic gaps for months, with 88% of SMB breaches in 2025 involving ransomware, the report says.
Patch teams are falling behind as exploited flaws pile up, with 47 million instances still open after a year, Qualys data shows.
More than 276,000 KPMG staff will gain access to Claude as the firm speeds up tax, legal and cybersecurity work across 138 countries.
Security and compliance hurdles are being tackled as Confluent rolls out tools to help firms move AI data pipelines from pilot to production.
Rising incidents and compliance demands are pushing small businesses towards managed security support as 91% worry about AI-driven attacks.
The move widens defences for businesses as AI systems become a bigger target for attackers and zero-day flaws multiply across enterprise software.
Australian firms face rising cyber and compliance costs as OpenText adds tools to govern AI use, data access and application risks.
Boards are valuing CISOs more for business risk, resilience and AI oversight than pure technical defence, a survey of 346 executives found.
Outages are now costing Global 2000 firms USD $600 billion a year, as a single incident can wipe 3.4% off share prices.
Enterprises running ageing systems may gain a safer alternative to patching, as the new service flags flaws before vendors disclose them.
Growing use of AI fakery is forcing companies to verify who is really on screen before hiring, approving payments or granting access.
Most UK businesses using AI are not checking suppliers' systems, even as cyber incidents and revenue losses linked to third parties rise.
Supplier-linked attacks and AI-related incidents are testing cyber defences in Hong Kong and Singapore, despite strong confidence in the technology.
Businesses facing rising phishing attacks in Singapore now have access to Canon's new suite, which covers monitoring, training and incident response.
Many small firms cannot block the attack with email or antivirus tools because it tricks staff into running malicious commands themselves.