Threat detection stories
Security teams could cut response times as the new read-only tools flag coverage gaps and speed early incident triage in Microsoft environments.
Attackers are exploiting help functions to reset credentials and bypass defences, putting entire networks at risk through a single call.
The Sydney move follows a USD $250 million funding round as the cloud security firm bets on real-time protection for fast-growing AI workloads.
Security teams can now trace AI-led attacks before phishing begins, as Outtake targets lookalike domains, bot networks and fake accounts.
Security teams gain visibility into blocked requests, token use and failures in AWS Bedrock deployments as AI oversight gaps widen.
It aims to cut manual copying and pasting by letting AI assistants query live GRC records under existing user permissions.
AI-driven attacks are complicating security checks as malicious bots now account for 40% of web traffic, Thales says.
UK businesses face a growing data security dilemma as US laws can force American tech giants to hand over customer information.
Stolen passwords can still leave companies safe if access controls check device trust, location and context before letting anyone in.
Businesses face higher operational and cybersecurity risks as Anthropic's agents let non-technical teams build software that can act across systems.
Security teams face new pressure to protect AI data and backups, as Dell adds quantum-ready safeguards and faster recovery tools.
Patching delays now carry greater risk as Google says AI is helping attackers scale intrusions, speed up breaches and automate operations.
Local firms in regulated sectors can now keep identity security data onshore as scrutiny over machine and AI access intensifies.
Most Australian security teams lack confidence their controls can spot a compromised AI system, even as firms push assistants beyond pilots.
Only 5% of businesses follow Cyber Essentials, leaving many firms exposed to breaches and looming reporting rules, experts warn.
Rising AI-driven phishing is forcing cyber security vendors to bolster defences, as Abnormal AI adds senior leaders in product, customer success and legal.
Current frontier models still fall short of stand-alone cyber defence, with the top performer spotting only 46% of attack evidence in Simbian’s test.
Information on about 500,000 volunteers is being offered for sale online, raising fears that stolen health and DNA data could be misused for years.
Half of Singapore organisations with AI security coverage still reported a confirmed or suspected incident, exposing gaps in monitoring and response.
Payment failures now surface in seconds for Modulus Labs after it unified monitoring and security, cutting resolution time by more than 40 per cent.