Supply Chain Security stories
Canadian firms are still exposed by weak identity controls, despite reporting slightly fewer cyberattacks than the global average.
Pressure to simplify fragmented security tools is driving BlueVoyant’s leadership shake-up as John Hernandez takes over as Chief Executive Officer.
Rising use of autonomous AI tools on corporate devices has left security teams blind to agents that can access sensitive data and systems.
Small defence contractors are left exposed as state-backed hackers spend years mapping supply chains and laying covert access routes before striking.
Security chiefs say AI agents and credential theft are making password-only defences too risky as World Password Day returns.
Regulated organisations can now run AI across distributed data while preserving access controls, audit trails and compliance boundaries.
Broader attacker activity is increasingly moving beyond stolen credentials, even as identity still accounted for 58.7% of incidents in Q1 2026.
The listing gives regulated AWS customers a faster route to compliant Kubernetes components, avoiding custom hardening and patching work.
A flaw in a widely watched Microsoft repository could have let attackers run code and steal secrets through GitHub Actions, Tenable said.
Detection of malicious code can collapse when AI reviewers are fed large files packed with harmless text, Cloudflare's research shows.
It lets developers use AI coding tools without pasting sensitive credentials into prompts, reducing the risk of secrets leaking into logs or source control.
Businesses face rising risks from unverified agents, tampered models and synthetic media as DigiCert adds cryptographic controls across its platform.
Many firms cannot see where their AI agents are, leaving identity, policy and supply-chain risks to grow as deployments scale.
Customers will get a single view of suppliers and cyber exposure as fragmented third-party risk data is linked across separate systems.
UK businesses face a growing data security dilemma as US laws can force American tech giants to hand over customer information.
Public sector buyers in New Zealand gain a marketplace option for tighter email controls as phishing and impersonation keep driving cyber risk.
Phishing, supplier risks and weak staff training are still leaving UK firms exposed, experts warn after the latest government survey.
UK businesses are leaving gaps in incident response and backup planning as experts warn AI-assisted attacks are outpacing policy.
Only 5% of businesses follow Cyber Essentials, leaving many firms exposed to breaches and looming reporting rules, experts warn.
Customers will now get independent assurance that Nebula Global Services has tested its defences against common cyber threats across its systems.