Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Shai-Hulud: The Second Coming Hits npm Users

Once again, the npm supply chain has been compromised, putting developers relying on these vital open source components at risk. On November 24th, a sophisticated attack that borrows techniques from the Shai-Hulud malware used in the npm hijacking this past September was discovered. This is not an isolated incident. It’s a continuation of an existing campaign that is now abusing CI/CD pipelines, and GitHub automation to spread faster and steal more secrets than before.

The Genesis Mission: A New Era of AI-Accelerated Science and a New Security Imperative

Innovation has always been the engine of American advancement. With the launch of the Genesis Mission, the White House is signaling a new era of AI-accelerated scientific discovery. This executive order directs the Department of Energy to build an integrated, national-scale AI platform designed to unlock scientific breakthroughs across biotechnology, energy, materials, quantum systems, and beyond.

The REAL Reason Scam Ads Won't Go Away

Why are scam ads and phishing sites still everywhere? Despite the tech, resources, and talent in cybersecurity, we still find ourselves playing catch-up instead of leading the charge. One of the reasons? The industry's reactive nature and the fragmented state of intelligence sharing. In the latest episode of The Connectivity Cloud Podcast, Vladimir Krupnov and Blake Darché explore how companies like Revolut are pushing for a more proactive, collaborative, and disruptive approach to cyber defence.

The Death of Passwords: The Future of Authentication

Is passwordless authentication finally ready for prime time, or are we just replacing one set of problems with another? Welcome to Razorwire, the podcast where we share our take on the world of cybersecurity with direct, practical advice for professionals and business owners alike. I’m Jim and in this episode, we’re tackling one of the oldest challenges in information security: identity and access management.

CVE-2025-61757: Critical Pre-Auth RCE in Oracle Identity Manager

A newly disclosed vulnerability, CVE-2025-61757, exposes Oracle Identity Manager (OIM) to unauthenticated remote code execution (RCE). The flaw affects OIM versions 12.2.1.4.0 and 14.1.2.1.0 and carries a CVSS 9.8 Critical rating. CISA has added it to the Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog — meaning active exploitation is confirmed.

MCP ROI in a New Era of AI Orchestrated Threats

Security leaders spent most of the past year testing AI driven security automation. Many discovered that the promise of fully autonomous SOC operations collided with the reality of hallucinations, opaque recommendations, and inconsistent outcomes. McKinsey research now shows that more than 80 percent of organizations have not realized meaningful results from gen AI programs.

Inside Brazil's New Digital Asset Rules: What Institutions Need to Know for VASP Readiness

Brazil has formalized a comprehensive framework for virtual asset service providers (VASP). This is the moment when the rules become operational, enforceable, and aligned with the scale of activity taking place in the country. For institutions already active in Brazil and those evaluating market entry, this is a shift that raises expectations and lowers uncertainty at the same time.

Managed Detection and Response Cost: What Organizations Should Expect

For many organizations, managed detection and response has become an essential service. With threats getting more deceptive and spreading at a faster rate, most IT/security teams are unable to investigate every suspicious event due to a lack of time or resources. This is why many organizations explore MDR, but they often don’t know how much managed detection and response would cost.

Managed Network Detection and Response: How It Works and Why Organizations Rely On It

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.