Supply Chain Security stories
Rising AI-generated vulnerability reports are leaving security teams with record backlogs and only hours to judge which flaws hackers can exploit.
New guidance aims to help firms curb data leakage and rogue actions as AI agents and models are embedded in daily operations.
Enterprises could gain tighter control over AI deployments as the new stack combines governance, security and on-premise data sovereignty.
AI coding agents are increasing supply chain risk, prompting new controls to verify third-party dependencies before they reach production.
A critical flaw in a widely used Microsoft code-sample repository could have let attackers steal secrets and run code through GitHub issues.
Most respondents still trust consumer chat apps for sensitive work, despite widespread confusion over what encryption does not protect.
Boards are being pressed to abandon periodic patching as AI models can now uncover and chain software flaws faster than human teams can respond.
The framework is designed to expose hidden risks in production AI systems that can be missed by conventional one-off tests.
Researchers say longer dwell time revealed how attackers scan freight, payments and banking systems to turn intrusions into cargo theft and fraud.
As AI agents spread across workplaces, static credentials are proving too risky for sensitive tasks and customer-facing systems.
Shorter attack windows are pushing cloud teams towards automated defence, as Sysdig says AI-driven threats now outpace manual response.
Cargo theft concerns across Asia-Pacific are pushing operators to use telematics and industry standards to spot risky route changes and stops earlier.
Enterprises face a new security gap as AI agents spread without oversight, with one preview model finding attack paths in hours rather than days.
Pressure is growing on AI vendors and software suppliers to improve vulnerability disclosure as experts warn basic CVE details are no longer enough.
Banks and security firms will test how advanced AI cyber tools can aid defence without widening the risk of offensive misuse.
Most North American SMBs now buy cyber insurance, as repeated breaches and insurer-imposed controls reshape how they manage risk.
More than 500 senior leaders will gather in Melbourne next July as cyber risk, AI and resilience pressures push security teams to align.
UK cyber security suppliers could gain access to regulated procurement frameworks under a new accreditation scheme based on staff competence.
Enterprise users are turning to Azul to cut Java cloud costs and compliance risks as finance, healthcare and telecoms demand jumped sharply.
Only a third of Australian organisations have tested cyber recovery plans, leaving many exposed despite high confidence in detection and response.