Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

AI Agent Governance Part 1 - Beyond the Chatbot: Mastering AI Agent Governance

In 2024, we talked to AI. In 2026, AI is talking to our systems, our customers, and increasingly, acting on our behalf. With AI agents, we are moving AI from a tool to an actor, from assistance to agency and from outputs to actions. And that changes the nature of risk. AI agents plan, execute, and interact with the world on our behalf. They send emails, move data, trigger workflows, and increasingly operate across systems without human intervention.

When AI changes the rules, attackers adapt

The dominant narrative around AI in security is one of emboldened defenders suppressing attackers. Yet, not everyone is convinced the future will be so rosy. In a recent Defender Fridays episode, Josh Neil, Co-founder and CTO of Alpha Level, made an argument that cuts against the celebratory mood: as AI makes known attack vectors harder to use, adversaries don't disappear. They adapt. For MSSPs and SOC teams, an adversary that looks like a user is a harder problem than one that looks like malware.

Higher Education Spotlight: Sensitive Data Governance in Decentralized Environments

Higher education faces a unique challenge when it comes to managing sensitive data governance. Unlike a more centralized corporate environment, colleges and universities often operate across many semi-independent schools, departments, research groups, and administrative teams. Each may have its own systems, priorities, workflows, and level of security maturity. That structure is part of what makes higher education work. It supports research, academic flexibility, and departmental independence.

5 Best Mobile Device Management (MDM) Solutions

With the surge in remote work and BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) policies, securing corporate data across thousands of mobile endpoints has become a critical challenge. In fact, over 80% of small business owners rely on mobile devices for work daily (Zen Business), making mobile device security a critical aspect for businesses. To meet this requirement, businesses are opting for Mobile Device Management (MDM) software at scale.

The One Cybersecurity Policy Every Small Business Needs (And Most Don't Have)

Most small business owners have thought about cybersecurity at some point. Maybe after reading a headline about a ransomware attack. Maybe after a coworker clicked a sketchy email. Maybe after their IT company mentioned it in passing. But thinking about cybersecurity and actually having a policy in place are two very different things. Businesses that invest in proper cybersecurity services are far less likely to suffer a costly breach, yet most small businesses are still operating without one critical layer of protection: a formal Acceptable Use Policy.

How to Prepare Your Organization for Rigorous Federal Security Standards

Navigating the cybersecurity landscape for defense contractors has become far more complex than it was in the past. Requirements are evolving quickly as global threats grow more advanced and targeted. Companies that work with the government can no longer afford to overlook these standards if they want to maintain eligibility for contracts.

How an AI SEO Agency Helps SaaS Businesses Rank Faster Online

Software companies often depend on search visibility long before paid acquisition becomes efficient. Yet many teams publish pages without a clear intent map, a crawl plan, or realistic ranking priorities. Results slow down for predictable reasons. Search growth usually improves when technical repair, keyword research, and content planning move in the right order. With that structure in place, SaaS brands can reach evaluators earlier, support longer buying cycles, and build a steadier pipeline from organic discovery.

Invisible Cross-Tracking: How Mobile Apps Share Your Data and How to Stop It

Tracking user activity across apps on mobile devices is crucial, as data no longer flows from a single source on phones. For example, in the span of an hour, a user might open Instagram, Gmail, a shopping app, a weather app, and a free game, while various advertising tools quietly analyze network signals, device behavior, location data, and app usage patterns. A VPN won't remove every unique identifier in these apps, but it does make it harder to connect one link in this tracking chain: the digital network footprint.

How Unsafe Infrastructure Can Lead to Injury Lawsuits

Every cracked sidewalk has a story. Every collapsed railing, every ceiling that gives way, each one represents a chain of failures that too often ends with someone seriously hurt. Across Canada, thousands of people suffer preventable injuries each year in the very spaces they trust most: roads, parks, office buildings, public stairwells. Unsafe infrastructure isn't a bureaucratic talking point. It's a genuine public health crisis that affects ordinary people on ordinary days.

How to build an incident response plan that works

Most organizations have an incident response plan on file. Few have one that survives first contact with a real incident. Rigorous, recurring testing remains the exception, so most teams only discover their plan's failure points during an actual breach. That gap is expensive. Teams that lean on security AI and automation consistently contain breaches faster than those still running responses by hand.