A June 2026 roundup of market projections puts global information security spending at very different totals, exposing how hard it is to measure what the industry actually counts as security.
In healthcare and other regulated environments, DPIA and ISO/IEC 27005 matter because risk only drops when it is managed as a living process, not a one-time document.
Philip Martin’s move into the CISO seat is a personnel shift, but it also reflects how much weight modern security leadership carries inside a large digital platform.
The dispute is not about a breach or a stolen dataset, but about who gets to shape public opinion around the power, cost, and politics of AI data centers.
A 2026 compensation report on CISOs is less about payroll trivia than about how organizations value cyber leadership, retention, and executive accountability.
A social trend about China is less interesting as slang than as a case study in how short-form platforms can turn lifestyle aesthetics into geopolitical signal.
As transport becomes more software-driven, ISO 39001 and ISO/IEC 27001 start looking less like separate standards and more like two halves of the same resilience problem.
As remote work surges, ISO/IEC 27001 emerges as the unsung hero keeping sensitive data and digital workflows secure.
Behind the paperwork and promises-what it really takes to achieve, and keep, ISO 27001 certification.
Passing ISO 27001 isn’t just paperwork-unseen technical, organizational, and cultural barriers make it one of cybersecurity’s most misunderstood challenges.
Stanford scientists unlock a new form of “smart skin” that morphs in color and texture when wet-raising questions about the future of camouflage, security, and cyber-physical interfaces.