Security Posture stories
Businesses will gain tighter control over AI agents and data flows as Zscaler folds Symmetry Systems' identity-mapping tools into its platform.
Security teams can now automate exposure fixes and reporting as Tenable makes Hexa AI generally available to Tenable One customers.
Attackers still exploit basic gaps for months, with 88% of SMB breaches in 2025 involving ransomware, the report says.
Patch teams are falling behind as exploited flaws pile up, with 47 million instances still open after a year, Qualys data shows.
Businesses using AI agents may gain tighter controls as Zscaler adds new governance tools and deepens a decade-old partnership with Alstom.
SMBs in Australia and New Zealand could cut the cost and complexity of cyber certification through a new channel-led package.
Enterprises are testing only about 32% of their attack surface, leaving many assets outside regular security checks as threats grow faster.
Security teams may cut backlogs as validated HackerOne flaws are mapped into Wiz, linking exploit evidence to cloud assets for faster prioritisation.
Threat alerts have fallen by 98% for Europe's largest cinema operator after it overhauled security across eight countries.
A widening gap is emerging as firms struggle to meet tighter data rules, with only 29% prioritising sovereign AI in the near term.
The purchase adds browser-based AI controls to Akamai's security portfolio as firms scramble to monitor staff use of generative tools.
Security teams can now spot cloud misconfigurations and compliance gaps in real time as VersaONE adds posture management across major public clouds.
More than nine in ten security incidents now involve anonymising services, leaving many organisations unable to spot malicious traffic in real time.
Shared ownership of security and networking is still rare at large US firms, leaving many exposed to breaches, delays and higher costs.
The findings show many firms still leave internet-facing databases and admin tools open, giving attackers easy routes before flaws are even published.
Businesses can now buy senior cyber security leadership on a flexible basis, easing compliance pressure without the cost of a full-time executive.
New compliance reporting rules from April 2026 mean New Zealand agencies and firms must prove cyber controls are planned, repeatable and effective.
Autodesk is among early users as the new controls aim to give security teams runtime visibility into unapproved AI agents and their actions.
It aims to cut alert fatigue by using runtime data to validate threats, prioritise real risks and guide fixes across cloud and AI systems.
The hire signals a sharper focus on resilience and customer trust as buyers demand stronger governance from identity security suppliers.