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The massive AI collapse nobody is talking about #aisecurity #business #trending

Many AI companies are still running at a loss while businesses rush to build critical services on top of them. If compute costs rise and margins collapse, some of those vendors may disappear without warning, taking business critical processes down with them.

Home-Field Disadvantage: AiTM, QR-Code Phishing, and Infostealers at the 2026 FIFA World Cup

The 2026 FIFA World Cup is a once-in-a-generation opportunity, and threat actors have already begun capitalizing on it. The 2026 FIFA World Cup, set to kick off on June 11, has already broken records for the most host nations, the most matches, and the highest amount of prize money to date for winning teams. Arctic Wolf set out to proactively investigate the criminal ecosystem surrounding the tournament.

How Shadow AI is Creating an Unmanaged Identity Crisis

Employees are adopting AI tools, agents and automations faster than organizations can govern them. The real danger emerges when these tools connect directly to internal systems and sensitive data in the name of enhancing productivity. Among employees who use AI at work, a significant share do so without formal approval from IT or security teams, which is commonly called shadow AI.

File Integrity Monitoring: A Guide for Modern Security

You probably already have endpoint alerts, firewall logs, cloud audit trails, vulnerability scans, and a queue full of tickets tied to expected changes. Yet one of the most common blind spots is still simple file drift on important systems. A web server config changes outside the maintenance window. A startup script gets altered so malware survives a reboot. A registry key flips on a server nobody thought to watch closely.

Agentic AI is Calling Your APIs: Why Autonomous Agents are the New Attack Surface

On April 27, 2026, a threshold was crossed that the internet had never hit before. Cloudflare Radar data confirmed that automated systems, such as bots, crawlers, and autonomous AI agents, now generate 57.4% of all HTTP requests for web content. Human traffic accounts for just 42.6%. What is accelerating this transformation is agentic AI: autonomous systems that browse, search, authenticate, and transact on behalf of users without any human intervention mid-task.
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The Control Paradox: Why Regulated Industries Must Rethink AI in Security Operations

For decades, highly regulated sectors have taken a cautious approach to cybersecurity, and for organisations in industries such as banking and finance, healthcare, insurance and critical national infrastructure, the instinct has been to retain ownership of security operations. That model is now under strain. Escalating cyber threats, regulatory scrutiny, and a growing skills shortage are exposing the limits of traditional Security Operations Centres (SOCs). At the same time, AI-driven technologies are maturing rapidly and forcing a strategic rethink.

Top 7 CDN Services That Improve Speed While Protecting Your Website

Website speed and website security used to feel like two separate projects. In 2026 they're basically the same conversation. When your pages load slowly, users bounce and ad costs creep up. When scrapers, probes, or traffic spikes hit your site, a "speed issue" turns into downtime (or at least a costly performance day).

HDD Locating Frequency Selection: Why Multi-Frequency Transmitters Matter

Single-frequency locating can work on clean, shallow, predictable bores. Modern HDD sites rarely stay that simple. U.S. crews drill through utility corridors, reinforced pavement, dry soil, wet clay, rail crossings, and active electrical noise. Frequency choice now affects whether the receiver shows a stable drill position or sends the crew into guesswork.

How AI Is Changing Both Cyberattacks and Cyber Defense

Artificial intelligence is changing cybersecurity because it gives both attackers and defenders more speed, scale, and flexibility. Attackers can use AI to write better messages, test code, scan targets, and move through stolen data faster. Security teams can use similar technology to detect odd behavior, sort alerts, and respond before a small incident becomes a serious breach. The biggest shift is not that AI replaces every hacker or every analyst. Work that once required hours, special training, or a larger team can now be assisted by software.