Incident Response stories
The new service aims to help firms keep pace as AI-powered criminals automate attacks faster than security teams can patch flaws.
Enterprise IT teams could cut alert noise and speed incident response as LogicMonitor tests AI-led workflows with selected customers.
The rollout aims to give the carmaker centralised visibility across thousands of systems as attacks on connected industrial networks intensify.
The tool aims to cut the time analysts spend on SaaS threat reviews as security teams grapple with rising alert volumes and noise.
Developers using open-source tools face heightened supply-chain risk after the botnet lost all four of its command channels.
The move gives Ferrari a single security system for factory, racing and corporate operations as cyber risks intensify across its connected estate.
Enterprises could see faster, more accountable software delivery as human oversight stays in place for AI agents handling coding and support.
Security teams could cut response times as the new platform links threat intelligence, hunting and remediation across existing tools.
Security teams can now track Claude use alongside other enterprise logs, helping firms meet compliance rules and investigate activity more easily.
AI attacks are pushing firms to prioritise cyber resiliency, as Everpure warns downtime can exceed ransom demands by up to 75 times.
Hundreds of millions of student records may be exposed, disrupting exam systems at universities and highlighting the fragility of centralised school software.
Centralised access data is helping security teams spot risks sooner, streamline compliance and improve how sites, staff and space are managed.
The AWS recognition should help Group-IB win more regulated financial customers by proving its fraud and incident response tools meet sector standards.
It will let security teams fold Claude audit trails into existing monitoring, easing compliance checks as AI use spreads across enterprises.
Thousands of schools faced disruption after a vendor breach exposed how learning platforms and cloud services can halt teaching and assessments.
Confidence in defence remains patchy as 68 per cent of UK business leaders plan higher cyber spending and 46 per cent fear new tools widen threats.
Funding and skills shortages are leaving Australian agencies unable to safely deploy AI while keeping ageing systems resilient and under control.
The approval helps preserve access for US agencies relying on secure emergency alerts, crisis coordination and incident response tools.
UK firms are still treating cyber security as an IT issue, leaving board oversight, supplier checks and proof of resilience dangerously thin.
The partnership is helping fill Australia's cyber skills gap, with 20 graduates placed into live security environments over five years.