Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Is ChatGPT Safe? Understanding Its Privacy Measures

“Is ChatGPT safe” is the headline question that nearly every team asks the moment AI enters the room. The better version is: safe for what, and under which controls? Safety is not a single switch. It combines technical security, data privacy, content safeguards, governance, and how your people use the tool. This guide breaks down how ChatGPT handles data, where privacy risks actually come from, and the practical steps to operate safely at home and at work.

Beyond the AWS Outage: How CloudCasa and Any2Cloud Enable True Multi-Cloud Resilience for Kubernetes

When AWS’s US-East-1 region went down again this month, it reminded the industry of an uncomfortable truth: even the most trusted cloud platforms can fail. From streaming services to SaaS providers, many businesses were caught off guard, not because they lacked backups, but because they lacked redundancy. In a Kubernetes world, redundancy isn’t just about having data snapshots.

Dual-Platform Backdoor from a South Asian Threat Group: StealthServer

In my ongoing monitoring of cyber threats in South Asia, I’ve encountered a series of advanced persistent threat (APT) activities. This region has long been a hotspot for sophisticated cyberattacks, with various groups ramping up their operations in terms of frequency and technical complexity. Starting from early July, I’ve captured multiple new malware samples targeting both Windows and Linux platforms.

Hidden Cyber Threats in Business Acquisitions: What Buyers Often Miss

Buying a business can feel like stepping into a new world of opportunity — more revenue, a stronger market presence, and a ready customer base. But in today’s landscape, every new business also comes with something unseen: inherited cyber risks. From customer records to cloud software and connected devices, digital operations now sit at the heart of almost every business.

Jingle Thief Gift Card Fraud: How Cloud Account Misuse Became a Pandemic for Retailers

Jingle Thief gift card fraud is a reminder that attackers don’t always need zero-day bugs or exotic malware to make millions — they need credentials and patience. In 2024–2025, security teams observed a financially motivated cluster (tracked by defenders as “Jingle Thief” / CL‑CRI‑1032) that focused on phishing and identity misuse to quietly harvest access to cloud platforms, then abuse gift-card issuance workflows at scale.

Clickjacking and Hidden Redirects: The Overlooked Brand Impersonation Threat

Note: Classic clickjacking typically targets authenticated users on legitimate sites, while this article explores its broader use in redirect-based impersonation scenarios. Clickjacking is a UI redress attack that tricks users into clicking hidden elements, often redirecting them to spoofed landing pages that impersonate trusted brands. Once dismissed as a browser quirk, it is now a silent bridge between user interaction and large-scale brand impersonation campaigns.

Cato CTRL Threat Research: Preventing Privilege Escalation via Active Directory Certificate Services (ADCS)

Maintaining an Active Directory (AD) enterprise environment is no easy task. Between all the permissions, security compliances, update cycles, emergency patches, appliance configurations and more, covering all the bases could feel overwhelming at times and could lead to errors that may result in major consequences.

Downstream Data: Investigating AI Data Leaks in Flowise

Low-code workflow builders have flourished in the AI wave, providing the “shovels and picks” for non-technical users to make AI-powered apps. Flowise is one of those tools and, like others in its category, it has the potential to leak data when configured without user authentication. To understand the risk of misconfigured Flowise instances, we investigated over a hundred data exposures found in the wild.

What Is Whaling in Cyber Security? How Attackers Target the C-Suite

Cybercrime doesn’t differentiate between individuals. It can happen to anyone, anytime. We have all heard about phishing attacks, where attackers deceive innocent people into clicking on malicious links and expose their sensitive information. It happens through text messages, emails, and phone calls. When such phishing targets high-profile individuals, like CEOs, CFOs, or top executives of organizations, it’s called a ‘Whaling Attack’.