Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Trusted AI Adoption (Part 2): Detection

It’s Monday morning. Your coding agents ran all weekend. Your security dashboard shows the exact same numbers it did Friday afternoon. Same models, the same approved Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers, the same AI assets you are familiar with. Reassuring. Then, suddenly, you get a notification: a production deploy failed an audit. The build references a model nobody on your team registered.

May Release Rollup: Egnyte Actions, Metadata Enhancements and More

Whether you're managing content across distributed teams, navigating complex governance requirements, or looking for smarter ways to use AI, this month's updates have something for you. You can also join the Egnyte Community to get the latest updates, chat with experts, share feedback, and learn from other users.

KubeFed Explained: Kubernetes Federation Guide

Running one Kubernetes cluster is complex enough. Running five across AWS, GCP, and an on-prem data center without a unified control plane gets painful fast. Kubernetes Federation v2 (KubeFed) was built to solve this problem: managing federated Kubernetes clusters from a single point of control and distributing workloads across regions and providers without duplicating YAML files for every environment.

What Mexico's RFC waiver means for identity verification in banking

In April 2026, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum announced that individuals will no longer need a Federal Taxpayer Registry (RFC) number to open an N2 or N3 bank account. As the country continues its transition to cashless payments, this move has the potential to bring more than 32 million unbanked, informal workers into the financial system. But it doesn’t come without risk.

Corelight brings unique network data into Cisco Cloud Control

Corelight, a leader in fueling the AI SOC, today announced that it is providing industry-leading data to power AI investigations of emerging threats through an integration of Corelight Open NDR into Cloud Control Studio. Cloud Control Studio is the design space within Cisco Cloud Control, Cisco’s unified platform for agentic IT operations, where customers can build AI agents and connect them to non-Cisco tools.

Protecting critical infrastructure in the AI era: It starts with data

In the public sector, it’s not uncommon for disruptions of critical infrastructure to ripple outward and wreak major havoc on systems and communities whether the cause is a technical issue, a natural disaster, or a cyber attack. As critical infrastructure becomes more connected through distributed systems and IoT devices, the attack surface continues to expand.

Allowed Is Not Aligned: Why Retrofitted Tools Can't Secure AI Agents

Gartner named Zenity the Company to Beat in AI Agent Governance on April 17, 2026. That recognition, grounded in technical capabilities, customer implementations, ecosystem breadth, and business model, isn't a marketing award. To us, it's the analyst community confirming that purpose-built architecture for agentic AI is winning. The recognition didn't come in isolation. Gartner's own language captures the stakes.

Vercel's Tom Occhino on why access control is product architecture

Zero-Shot Learning is a podcast about how AI gets built, secured, and deployed. Hosted by Nancy Wang, 1Password CTO, and Dev Tagare, Senior Director of Engineering at Google, it's a builder's view of the architecture and the complex choices it takes to ship with AI.

Protestware by open source maintainer to hinder agentic coding: The jqwik 1.10.0 Prompt Injection

On May 25, 2026, the maintainer of jqwik, a Java property-based testing library, released version 1.10.0 to Maven Central with a hidden instruction intended for AI coding agents. The payload told agents to disregard previous instructions and delete all jqwik tests and code. It was hidden from humans with ANSI terminal codes but left fully readable to any tool that captures raw output.

Why "Private" Hosting Isn't the Same as Secure Hosting

For many organizations, the move to virtual private server (VPS) hosting feels like a natural security upgrade. After all, the word private suggests isolation, control, and protection; especially compared to shared hosting environments. But in practice, private hosting does not automatically mean secure hosting. In fact, without the right security maturity, VPS environments can introduce new risks rather than eliminate old ones.