Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

7 Key Features to Look For in a PAM Solution

With credentials now being one of the most exploited vectors in cyberattacks, we must go beyond basic access controls and ensure every privileged session is secure, auditable, and justified. That’s why choosing a robust privileged access management (PAM) solution is a must. This post will walk you through the seven best features in PAM solutions that can effectively protect your infrastructure.

Hijacked by a Text: Understanding and Preventing SIM Swapping Attacks

SIM swapping is not a novel cyber threat; it has been a persistent issue for over a decade. This technique exploits vulnerabilities in mobile carrier procedures and identity verification protocols. Attackers employ social engineering tactics to deceive telecom providers into transferring a victim’s phone number to a SIM card under their control.

Data driven detection: Corelight's approach to AI-powered NDR

The Gordian knot of any detection strategy is knowing that two conflicting ideas are both true. On one hand, every SOC needs as much accurate detection coverage as they can get to find and disrupt attacks. On the other, the attackers you REALLY care about will find a way to bypass those detections so you need the ground truth of the attacker behavior on your network. The only answer is to have both: the absolute best data and the broadest detection suite possible on top of it.

What Is A Qualified Electronic Signature and When Do You Need It?

The European Union has many laws and requirements to protect our data online, the most well-recognised being the GDPR. Aside from that, the EU also has regulations to make signing and verifying sensitive documents easily and securely online by using a qualified electronic signature. These kinds of signatures are quickly replacing traditional document signing, which is time-consuming and has a higher risk of fraud or document tampering.

Rewriting the Rules of China Connectivity with Cato SASE Cloud

What if operating in China didn’t require a separate architecture? For global enterprises, China is too important and too complex to ignore. Whether you’re already operating there or considering expansion, China introduces unique connectivity, security, and compliance challenges that most global architectures aren’t equipped to handle. Infrastructure gaps, regulatory demands, and inconsistent user experience combine to make China uniquely challenging for IT and security leaders.

Risk register template guide

A risk register is a structured document used to identify, track, and manage risks throughout a project or within an organization’s operations. It serves as a central repository for all known risks, helping teams stay aware of potential issues that could impact objectives. Each entry typically includes a risk description, the likelihood and impact of the risk, the person responsible, and planned mitigation or treatment actions.

Data-Driven Innovation: How Smart Insights Are Reshaping Modern Business

In today's digital-first world, the line between business decisions and data is disappearing fast. Every click, transaction, and interaction generates information, and the companies that know how to interpret this information gain a significant advantage over those that don't. The result is a new era where data-driven innovation is no longer a luxury or a technical concept-it's a fundamental business necessity.

Douglas Lemott Jr. Draws on Decades of Military Leadership to Protect the Critical Systems the U.S. Depends On

Douglas Lemott Jr. oversees cybersecurity at the Analysis and Resilience Center for Systemic Risk, also known as ARC. As Chief Information Security Officer, he's responsible for protecting the systems that enable major companies to collaborate when the national infrastructure is at risk. These companies operate in essential sectors like power, finance, and communications. If something goes wrong, ARC members must be able to communicate and act quickly to resolve the issue.

How Computers Help in Hospitals: EHR Design

The doctor used to write notes on paper when someone came to the clinic. These remarks told what the problem was, what medicine was given, and whether the patient had improved. But now, most doctors use computers to do this. The notes are saved in a special program called Electronic Health Records, or EHR. EHR is like a digital notebook. It keeps all health details in one place. The way it looks and works is called EHR Design. If the design is good, it makes life easy for everyone in the hospital.

What Ransomware Teaches Us About Weak Links in the Development Pipeline

Ransomware attacks aren't just hitting banks and government agencies anymore-they're going straight for the jugular of how modern software is made. That's right: the development pipeline has become prime hunting ground. And while companies scramble to patch after the damage is done, the smarter ones are shifting focus to where it all begins-the code, the pipeline, and the people pushing it live.