A June 2026 guide on entering security operations with no prior experience reflects a simple reality: organizations still need people who can turn raw alerts into decisions.
A new AI decree on after-the-fact face matching for security purposes may look narrow on paper, but it raises a wider question: when does an investigative tool become a biometric surveillance system?
Anthropic’s Project Glasswing is expanding into critical infrastructure, and that turns vulnerability discovery into a throughput problem for defenders.
A new wave of AI-assisted vulnerability hunting is widening its reach into critical infrastructure, but the bigger security question is whether remediation can keep up.
Network Detection and Response is still fighting its old reputation for noisy alerts, but agentic AI is now being used by some teams to spot threats sooner, move through triage faster, and cut down false positives.
Static analysis matters most when it is wired into everyday development, where code can be checked before compilation or release instead of after a vulnerability ships.
A 2026 SAST tools roundup points to a bigger reality in AppSec: the best scanner is the one that fits the codebase, pipeline, and review process.
A single confirmed flaw in a heavily scrutinized codebase became a test case for how AI-assisted security research is measured, verified, and misunderstood.
As Anthropic’s Mythos turbocharges vulnerability detection, most organizations are dangerously behind on turning findings into fixes.
Despite heavy investment in AI-powered cybersecurity, many organizations are still waiting for tangible improvements in digital defense.
A software glitch in Microsoft’s email defenses left thousands of users without access to critical messages and sowed confusion across the digital workplace.
A Seattle startup claims it can finally silence the “false positive” epidemic plaguing security teams worldwide.