The 2026 Kubernetes Community Day in NYC made trust an execution problem, linking zero trust APIs, agent governance, CVE evidence, and sustainable open source work.
Last June, we hosted the first EveryOps Day in Sydney – born from the convergence of DevOps, DevSecOps, and AI/MLOps we were witnessing across every industry in APAC. A year later, with AI’s proliferation across software delivery and security, we took EveryOps Day to Mumbai on May 15, then embarked on the EveryOps Tour: a series of invitation-only executive events across Canberra, Sydney, and Melbourne.
There is a saying you will hear from veterans in the Black Hat Network Operations Center (NOC): “Threat hunting on the Black Hat network is like trying to find a needle in a stack of needles." With dozens of training classes running live exploit chains, capture-the-flag traffic, and researchers probing every corner of the internet, our Corelight sensors generate a rich set of Zeek logs, many of which can look suspicious in varying degrees.
ThreatSpike exhibited at Infosecurity Europe 2026 at ExCeL London from 2–4 June this year. Three days, ten expert sessions presented on our stand and more conversations about AI than we’ve had at any event in recent memory. This is our round-up: what we saw on the floor, what we presented, and what the industry is clearly wrestling with right now.
Reliability leaders and subject matter experts at SREday NYC examined how AI, faster delivery, and complex systems increase the need for grounded operational context.
Speakers made it clear that agentic AI is already operating across enterprise workflows. Learn why identity must govern ownership, permissions, actions, and accountability.
In an AI-assisted development era, the third edition of BSides312 showed why trust, identity, access, evidence, and community remain core to security work.
In today’s cybersecurity landscape, speed is often treated as the ultimate objective. Organizations are racing to adopt AI-driven technologies, automate workflows, reduce response times, and deliver faster outcomes. Digital forensics is no exception. Forensic examiners increasingly rely on tools that automate large parts of the analysis process, helping reduce the time required for complex investigations. But this raises an important question: at what cost?
We just got back from Atlassian Team '26 in Anaheim. Three days, thousands of attendees, and Atlassian's biggest push yet toward human-AI collaboration. The Founder Keynote set the tone, Rovo agents got smarter, and the Teamwork Collection took center stage. It was a packed, high-energy week. But the most interesting part of our three days wasn't on stage. It was at Booth.