Identity Assurance: Reinventing Trust in a Cyber-First World

Identity is everything. Hamper it, and the individual is left with disrupted privacy, reputation damage, and endless fraud. Attackers are always on the lookout for access to resources and accounts via identity theft, credential theft, and Account Takeover Attacks (ATO). So, it is paramount to leverage solutions that securely link a user’s identity with who they claim to be. Identity assurance offers frameworks, components, and best practices to safeguard modern-day identities.

CMMC Incident Response Timelines and Reporting Rules

Information security frameworks like CMMC are not just about enforcing security. They’re about enforcing accountability. That’s why a whole section of controls and rules that make up CMMC centers around incident response and reporting. You can’t just have security in place, but throw your hands up and do nothing if there’s an incident or breach. Nor can you sweep it under the rug and hope no one notices.

Strengthening Security with Up-To-Date Firewalls: A Guide for MSPs

Network devices that reach their End of Life (EOL) represent a significant risk that many organizations overlook. Beyond the lack of vendor support, they can become open doors for increasingly sophisticated attacks. A recent analysis by CSO reveals that two out of three security breaches originate from outdated firewalls and network devices -‒ with unpatched firmware and vulnerabilities that attackers know inside out.

How to easily protect your identity from theft and fraud

Identity theft is no longer just about lost wallets or stolen credit cards—it’s a growing digital threat that can start with something as simple as opening an email, clicking a link, or sharing information online. Criminals can use your personal data to open accounts, make purchases, or commit fraud in your name, and may also use your information to commit crimes beyond financial fraud, often leaving victims unaware until serious financial or legal damage occurs.

Cyber Resilience, AI Threats & Business Impact: Findings from 2025 LevelBlue Futures Report

Cyberattacks are evolving fast; powered by AI, deepfakes, ransomware, phishing, and growing software supply chain risk. So how prepared is your organization? In this webcast, we breakdown key findings from the 2025 LevelBlue Futures Report (in partnership with FT Longitude). The report is based on a global survey of 1,500 C-suite and senior executives across 16 countries and seven industries, including healthcare, financial services, energy, and manufacturing.

Configure the Egnyte Desktop Experience at Scale

Egnyte is extremely powerful, allowing users to work from anywhere. Many users prefer working on a desktop because they rely on powerful desktop applications to create complex content. With Egnyte, administrators benefit from being able to configure the desktop experience for their users. To make it easier for administrators, we’ve improved what until now has been a manual configuration process.

Jeremy Brown, CTO at GitGuardian, on AI, NonHuman Identities, and the Governance Gap in 2026

AI isn’t creating new security problems, it’s exposing existing ones at scale. GitGuardian saw 24M secrets leaked on public GitHub last year (+25%), and private repos are far more likely to contain secrets because people get careless when they feel safe. AI also enables more non-developers to ship apps without security training and generates oversized PRs that can’t be realistically reviewed, increasing leak risk. Attackers increasingly don’t “hack”, they use leaked credentials to log in and blend in like normal users, making traditional incident response less effective.

Continuous Penetration Testing: How to Mature Your Approach to Assessments

As cyber threats grow more sophisticated and persistent, traditional penetration testing methods, often conducted quarterly or annually, can miss key vulnerabilities and lack coverage. Continuous penetration testing enables organizations to identify and remediate vulnerabilities in real time, providing product and software teams with up-to-date insight and evidence to advance security and enhance regulatory compliance.

Domain Takedown Services vs In-House Tools: What Enterprises Actually Use

Domain takedown services are a familiar control for enterprises dealing with phishing, fake websites, and brand impersonation. When a spoofed domain appears, the instinctive response is to remove it as fast as possible. Security teams generally face a clear decision: handle takedowns internally using tools and SOC workflows, or rely on managed domain takedown services. What is less clearly understood is that this decision is not really about preference or maturity.