The sharpest risk is no longer the loud break-in, but the quiet account that behaves like an insider while it stays hidden for months.
Deepfakes are no longer only a media problem: in digital government, they can turn identity, approvals, and trust into attack surfaces.
The bank is building internal AI for customer intelligence and office automation, but the real story is how data control, model choice, and cyber discipline now sit at the center of the design.
A security company built on people is now treating artificial intelligence, hybrid cloud and robotics as operational infrastructure, not optional extras.
The real security contest is shifting from the perimeter to access control, where users, devices, services and machine identities now decide who gets in.
A 2026 roundup of privileged access management tools is a reminder that the real question is not who ranks first, but whether the product shrinks standing admin power in cloud, SaaS, and hybrid estates.
A 2026 roundup on ZTNA reflects a larger shift in cybersecurity: zero trust is the model, while ZTNA is one of the tools used to enforce it across remote users, cloud services, and exposed devices.
The real risk in multi-cloud is not having too many tools, but failing to govern routing, sovereignty, and recovery as one continuous system.
As enterprise access sprawls across SaaS, cloud workloads, and automation, the real risk is no longer only who is in the directory, but which identities exist beyond it.
When software can reach customer records, business tools, and internal workflows on its own, security has to shift from prompt safety to control-plane discipline.
A forward-looking view of security points to smaller trust zones, policy-driven access, and AI-aware operations replacing the old perimeter mindset.
The piece is really about a bigger shift in enterprise computing: in the AI era, trust is no longer branding language but a control problem built from access rules, logging, and restraint.
A Gartner briefing on security leadership in the AI era points to a familiar but now urgent pivot: CISOs are being pushed to treat identity as infrastructure, not administration.
In financial services, cyber resilience is shifting from promise to evidence, with DORA, NIS2, suppliers, and new threat pressure all pushing toward controls that can be measured, tested, and defended.
Zero Trust is increasingly discussed as an implementation problem, especially where old infrastructure, OT, and public-sector governance collide.
Anthropic’s Mythos and Project Glasswing have sharpened one uncomfortable lesson: vulnerability discovery is no longer just a security function, because remediation now lives in code, services, APIs, and ownership.
A conference talk in Rome put a simple idea back at the center of ransomware defense: make the environment harder to trust, harder to move through, and less worth the trouble.
Machine-speed vulnerability discovery is shrinking the time defenders have to react, pushing security teams toward Zero Trust, deception, and automated containment.
Frontier AI is no longer just scanning for bugs - it is beginning to connect weaknesses into attack paths, and that changes how defenders must think about exposure, validation, and access control.
A 20th-anniversary retrospective on cybersecurity shows why the old perimeter mindset is no longer enough, and why AI-native systems now sit inside the blast radius.