Incident Response stories
Indian airports and other vital infrastructure will gain round-the-clock threat monitoring as Securonix and GRAMAX extend managed cyber defence services.
The hire underscores CTERA's push into a fast-growing segment as ransomware drives demand for stronger protection of live storage data.
Industrials remained the main target as the monthly ransomware total eased 7%, even as The Gentlemen surged to second place among active gangs.
Security teams face faster attack cycles as eSentire extends Atlas with agentic AI and appoints Ilan Mindel as Chief Cyber Officer.
The tie-up aims to cut manual handoffs and give enterprises clearer oversight of AI-driven tasks across IT, HR, procurement and security.
Industrial operators are turning to tighter network controls to curb cyberattacks, with OT now featuring in 26% of Zero Networks deals.
Attendance will be free as ITCON 2026 seeks to help firms tackle rising complexity, security gaps and brittle systems.
Security teams can now fold supplier risk alerts into incident response as GuidePoint's new service targets breaches from third-party tools.
A short remote programme cut burnout and attrition risk among cybersecurity staff, while also improving sleep and stress scores.
European ministries face a stealthier cyber-espionage campaign as Webworm shifts to Discord and Microsoft cloud tools to steal data.
Security teams in Australia and New Zealand may soon triage flaws faster as TrendAI uses Claude Opus 4.8 to assess exploitability and impact.
Delays between alerts and action leave businesses exposed, as ransomware and stolen credentials can spread before anyone intervenes.
Security teams may need to react faster as AI-boosted attackers can exploit flaws within hours, leaving patching cycles behind.
The ranking underscores rising demand for tools that can cover hybrid networks as ransomware and identity attacks increasingly target connected devices.
Security teams may get broader visibility into phishing campaigns as Doppel adds inbox defence to its platform for social engineering attacks.
Nearly half of large Irish organisations still lack confidence in spotting attackers early, leaving customer data and operations exposed.
UK firms face tighter cyber rules and faster reporting deadlines, as a new package combines protection, compliance and insurance cover.
Charities, small firms and fraud victims across Scotland got more than GBP £3 million in cyber support as the centre reinvested profits.
Organisations can recoup their outlay in six months, as the study found video management software cut investigation times and lifted productivity.
A free account could have let attackers alter Zapier-maintained packages and hijack logged-in users' browser sessions, researchers said.