mTLS, or mutual Transport Layer Security, is a mechanism that establishes two-way authentication between two parties, ensuring they are who they claim to be.
Claude Skills is a new feature from Anthropic that has gained rapid adoption, with more than 17,000+ GitHub stars already since its launch in October 2025, allowing users to create and share custom code modules that expand Claude’s capabilities and streamline workflows. But as this ecosystem grows, Cato CTRL uncovered a serious oversight into how Skills are executed.
Your phone rings. The number looks local, even familiar - so you answer. But within seconds, you're being asked to “verify your bank account” or “reset your login credentials.” Sounds suspicious? It is. That call likely came from a VoIP number, which is not a regular phone line. VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) lets anyone make calls over the internet, not just through mobile networks or landlines.
As a service, NinjaProxy is easy to review. It sells proxy servers that let you stay anonymous on the Internet, and it doesn't offer the thrills and frills of many of its competitors. But looking closely, it excels in a key area where competitors have often fallen short, according to a growing number of users. NinjaProxy has a particular focus on the quality of its IPs, which is why its CEO, Kevin Miller, has decided to keep the service free from the marketing buzzwords and fancy statistics.
The number of employees working at least one day outside the office has grown fivefold since 2019, making remote work security a critical concern for 42% of the workforce. Many organizations remain vulnerable to security threats despite this rapid change. Recent data shows that 57% of IT leaders worry that their remote workers could expose their organizations to data breaches.
You land in Dubai, grab your luggage, step outside into the warm desert breeze - and the first thing you see? Free Wi-Fi everywhere. Cafés, malls, beaches, taxis, even parking machines. It feels like a digital paradise. And while you're waiting for your car rent Dubai pickup, you naturally connect to whatever hotspot seems legit. After all, it's Dubai - everything here is premium, safe, polished. Right? Not exactly.
On November 18, 2025, a single configuration file change at Cloudflare disrupted access to large parts of the web. Around 11:20 UTC, Cloudflare’s network began returning a surge of HTTP 5xx errors. Users trying to reach services like X (formerly Twitter), ChatGPT/OpenAI, Ikea, Canva, and many others suddenly saw Cloudflare-branded error pages instead of the applications they expected. Cloudflare mitigated the issue, restored service, and published a detailed public report.
Many organizations focus on passing audits and earning certifications, believing those milestones signal safety. Yet the real world tells a different story. Breaches occur in environments that meet requirements on paper because attackers look for gaps that those standards overlook. Thus, leaders who want real protection need to shift their thinking. Instead of viewing compliance as the finish line, it should serve as a foundation.
As organizations move deeper into cloud-native ecosystems, modern network setup and DevOps engineering have become the backbone of operational stability. The days of simple on-prem routers and static topologies are long gone - today's infrastructure must be dynamic, observable, secure, and ready to scale on demand. Whether a company manages microservices, hybrid-cloud workloads, or distributed remote teams, the way networks are architected matters more than ever. Even a minor misconfiguration in routing or firewall rules can cascade into downtime, security gaps, or performance loss.
Organizations today depend heavily on connected systems, cloud applications, remote users, and third-party services for their online security. In most cases, attacks do not start with an apparent alert on an endpoint. They often originate in the network in the form of a strange connection or an unusual traffic route. These signs are subtle and easy to overlook until the attacker has infiltrated further. Most IT teams try to keep an eye on this activity, but monitoring a network 24/7 is not feasible.