Incident Response stories
Rising scam losses in Singapore are pushing police tech investment, as the pair plan forensic and AI tools to speed investigations.
Thailand has joined the ransomware top 10 as fewer groups now drive most attacks, raising the cost of each breach for businesses.
More than nine in ten security incidents now involve anonymising services, leaving many organisations unable to spot malicious traffic in real time.
Australia is increasingly in cyber criminals' sights as ransomware now reaches systems in minutes, leaving firms far less time to contain damage.
Shared ownership of security and networking is still rare at large US firms, leaving many exposed to breaches, delays and higher costs.
Verified access to Anthropic's restricted AI tools could help IRONSCALES test email defences against more realistic phishing and impersonation attacks.
The attack kept retrying for hours after network blocks, as a scheduled task and Python proxy preserved access on the host.
Trust is emerging as the main hurdle as enterprises weigh AI systems that can safely act on live incidents, not just flag them.
Repeat breaches exposed an Azerbaijani oil and gas operator to espionage as FamousSparrow exploited Microsoft Exchange flaws for two months.
Security teams may cut manual reporting effort by up to 70 per cent as new tools help validate threats against internal logs and history.
The move gives Dell users a way to verify recent snapshots and recover cleaner data after ransomware, reducing downtime and data loss.
Stolen credentials and post-login attacks are pushing security teams to seek unified monitoring across endpoints and identities.
Tighter EU compliance rules are driving demand for access controls as the security supplier expands its regional sales push across Western Europe.
Enterprises facing rising cyber risk will gain a single view of alerts and business impact as the firms combine security data and AI analytics.
Existing customers can now get AI-assisted threat hunting and response without extra cost, as attacks are moving faster than manual investigations.
It aims to cut alert fatigue by using runtime data to validate threats, prioritise real risks and guide fixes across cloud and AI systems.
Analysts could gain time as AI systems shoulder evidence gathering, alert grouping and data translation, though humans still make final calls.
Most Australian organisations are using or planning AI agents for security tasks before formal controls are in place, Semperis found.
Customers get a single cyber and compliance service as WorkNest folds Pentest People and Bulletproof into a new security division.
Despite welcome AI funding, tech leaders say small firms still lack the cyber defences needed to adopt new tools safely.