Understanding I/O Filters in VMware vSphere Environments

VMware vSphere offers a wide range of storage-related features for virtual machines. In addition to VMware vSAN and Virtual Volumes, VMware I/O filters are effective for VM administration since they unlock advanced features for different scenarios. This blog post explains what VMware I/O filters are, how they work and when to use them. NAKIVO for VMware vSphere Backup Complete data protection for VMware vSphere VMs and instant recovery options. Secure backup targets onsite, offsite and in the cloud.

Closing the MDR gap for MSPs: Acronis MDR by Acronis TRU available globally

Cybersecurity has entered a new operating reality. Threats are scaling faster, attack chains are becoming more complex and AI is accelerating both their frequency and sophistication. For MSPs, this creates a structural challenge: clients expect enterprise-grade protection, but most service providers don’t have the internal resources to operate a 24/7 SOC at scale. That’s where MDR comes in. But not all MDR services actually solve the problem.

How to Automate Windows Updates Using PowerShell: Short Overview

Patch management is a crucial aspect of IT infrastructure administration, just as Windows Workstation backup. With the right patch management solution, you can enhance your system by testing or installing the latest software updates and patches. Patches are regarded as temporary fixes for existing issues between full-scale software releases. If patch management is effectively performed, you can promptly address vulnerabilities of your system and mitigate any potential threats.

Your AppSec Metrics Are Lying to You. Here's What Actually Matters

Mend.io, formerly known as Whitesource, has over a decade of experience helping global organizations build world-class AppSec programs that reduce risk and accelerate development -– using tools built into the technologies that software and security teams already love. Our automated technology protects organizations from supply chain and malicious package attacks, vulnerabilities in open source and custom code, and open-source license risks.

Secure What Matters: Scaling Effortless Container Security for the AI Era

In November, we shared our vision for the Future of Snyk Container, outlining a fundamental shift in how teams secure the modern container lifecycle. We promised a future where security doesn’t just “scan” but scales effortlessly with the speed of the AI-driven, agentic world. Today, we are thrilled to announce that we are moving from vision to reality.

Modernizing threat detection with advanced ML: Corelight Sensor v.29 release highlights

Staying ahead of sophisticated attackers requires a security platform that evolves at the speed of the threat landscape. Today’s attackers are AI-enabled, increasing the number of attacks and targeting vulnerabilities more quickly than ever. That's why we are excited to announce the Corelight Sensor v.29 release, a significant step forward in our mission to provide critical detections backed by the world's best network evidence.

Top 5 Zero Trust Vendors in Cybersecurity in the United States

As cyber threats grow and become more threatening, businesses must shift to stronger, more proactive strategies to protect their data and networks. Zero Trust Security is one such approach gaining traction. Based on the principle of "never trust, always verify," Zero Trust continuously authenticates and authorizes every user and device before granting access to sensitive systems or data, regardless of whether they are inside or outside the network.

The Ingestion Cost Problem the SOC Can No Longer Ignore

Security teams are collecting more telemetry across endpoints, cloud workloads, and SaaS platforms, but the cost of bringing that data into the SIEM keeps rising. What used to be a straightforward operational decision has become a central budget challenge. Security teams are not struggling with collecting data, they are struggling with affording to keep it, and when ingestion cost drives visibility decisions, the SOC loses ground.

Microsoft Advancing Windows Driver Security: Ending Cross-Signed Kernel Driver Trust

Microsoft is preparing a major change to Windows that could quietly reshape how security and compatibility are balanced across the entire ecosystem. Starting April 2026, Windows will begin blocking kernel drivers signed through the legacy cross-signed root program by default, replacing a decades-old trust model with a stricter, policy-driven approach centred on the Windows Hardware Compatibility Program (WHCP). This is more than a routine update.