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by Gabriella DeCesare
As AI is more prevalently used in high-security environments, cybersecurity can no longer rely on static defenses like application logins or network boundaries. Instead, the focus must shift toward securing the data itself. Current frameworks remain rooted in legacy thinking, where security models still rely on traditional perimeter security, even
by Tony Bradley
Most security teams have more data than they know what to do with. Alerts, dashboards, telemetry feeds—all of it pointing at things that need attention. The problem isn’t that they can’t see the risks. It’s that seeing them and actually fixing them are two completely different things. Known vulnerabilities sit
The Agentic Threat Surface Already Has A Defense
March 31, 2026
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by Tony Bradley
The cybersecurity industry has spent the better part of two years trying to figure out how to secure AI agents. Most of that energy has pointed upstream: model governance, configuration hardening, intent-based policy layers, guardrails. Those things aren’t wrong. But they’re not enough, and focusing too heavily on them means
Cybersecurity in 2026: Responsible AI Defense
March 30, 2026
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by Paul Truitt
Artificial intelligence (AI) has reset the tempo of cybersecurity in 2026. Attackers can now automate reconnaissance, social engineering, and lateral movement, compressing the time between initial access and business impact. The result is a challenge for boards and executive teams: response windows are shrinking, and decisions about resilience can no
by Kevin Townsend
Three primary concerns for cybersecurity teams today are identity, pace, and a battleground shaped by global politics. The influence of AI pervades cybersecurity, giving attackers added sophistication, speed and scale. Where attacks are directed and by whom is increasingly influenced by geopolitical tensions and international alliances. But the focus of




