A film about cyber conflict has resurfaced a bigger security question: how defenders should think about disruption, resilience, and forecast-driven fear without mistaking projections for measured loss.
A Ukrainian security assessment points to a sharper use of AI in cyber conflict, but the most important detail is not autonomy - it is speed, scale, and better-targeted attack workflows.
The sharper lesson from the Iranian cyber conflict is not the myth of instant digital collapse, but the reality of layered pressure, identity abuse, and strategic coercion.
In a bold escalation, the Handala ransomware collective alleges it has unmasked a team of high-level SIGINT agents, shaking global cyber-intelligence circles.
State-aligned hacktivist groups are transforming cyber disruption into a repeatable weapon of geopolitical influence-and defenders are struggling to keep up.