Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Protecting Against Prompt Injection at the Data Layer, Not the Prompt Layer

Most teams try to fix prompt injection in the prompt itself. They add guardrails. They rewrite system messages. They stack more instructions on top of instructions. It feels productive. It is also fragile. Prompt injection is not just a prompt problem. It is a data problem. And if you treat it like a wording problem instead of a data control problem, you will keep playing defense. Let’s unpack why.

Introducing the AIDA Orchestration Agent: Always-On Human Risk Management Has Arrived

Social engineering remains the most reliable way into an organization—and attackers are getting better at it every day. According to the 2025 Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report, up to 68% of breaches involve social engineering. AI has only widened the gap. More than 95% of cybersecurity professionals say AI-generated phishing is harder to detect, and Microsoft reports that AI-generated phishing emails are 4.5x more successful than manually created ones.

Fake Video Meeting Invites Trick Users Into Installing RMM Tools

Threat actors are using phony meeting invites for Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, and other video conferencing applications to trick users into installing remote monitoring and management (RMM) tools, according to researchers at Netskope. The invites lead to convincingly spoofed landing pages for fake video meetings, complete with a list of coworkers who have supposedly already joined the call. The page instructs the user to install a software update in order to join the video meeting.

CrowdStrike 2026 Global Threat Report: The Evasive Adversary Wields AI

As cyber defenses become stronger, adversaries continue to evolve their tactics to succeed. In 2025, the year of the evasive adversary, the threat landscape was defined by attacks that targeted trusted relationships, demonstrated fluency with AI tools, and incorporated tradecraft tailored to exploit security blind spots.

OAuth security guide: Flows, vulnerabilities and best practices

OAuth is a commonly used authorisation framework, that allows websites and web applications to request limited access to a user’s account on another application. Users can grant this limited access to their account, without ever needing to expose their password with the requesting website or application. This is commonly seen with sites that allow you to log in with popular accounts such as a social media login, Microsoft or Google account.

AI isn't replacing SOC teams. It's elevating them.

AI has radically transformed the way SOC teams operate, but how is it affecting the people behind the work? For our recent Voice of Security 2026 report, we surveyed over 1,800 global security professionals to find out. We wanted to understand not only AI’s impact on security careers, but how teams really feel about these shifts. The results show that despite rising workloads and widespread burnout across security teams, sentiment toward AI is largely positive.

Endpoint AI Agents Don't Ask Permission. For Better or Worse, They Operate Like Employees

The next major security problem enterprises will face won’t originate in the cloud. It will emerge on endpoints, where agentic AI is already operating with autonomy, authority, and access to sensitive data.

The Surprising Automotive Roots of Modern Combine Harvester Technology

Where do combine harvesters get their brains from? It feels like combine technology has always been developed in-house by the various manufacturers we see today. But the truth is...many of the critical systems that run your combine harvester actually come from the automotive industry. GPS guidance systems, hydraulic components, electronic sensors...the list goes on. Plus the artificial intelligence that drives the insane automation you see in some of the newer models. Automotive technology paved the way for today's high-tech ag machinery.

Why Most Companies Don't Catch Internal Threats Until It's Too Late

Every year, businesses lose billions to threats that don't come from hackers on the other side of the world. They come from inside the building. Whether it's financial misconduct, data theft, or simple policy violations that snowball into costly incidents, internal threats are consistently one of the hardest risks to detect and manage.