Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Bleeding Ollama Out-of-Bounds Read Vulnerability (CVE-2026-7482)

A critical vulnerability (CVE-2026-7482), dubbed “Bleeding Llama”, has been disclosed in Ollama, a widely used open-source framework for running large language models (LLMs) locally. With a CVSS v3.1 score of 9.1, the issue is classified as Critical and affects versions prior to 0.17.1. The vulnerability exposes organisations using self-hosted AI infrastructure to significant information disclosure risks.

AI-assisted vulnerability reporting with Shane Warden

Join us for this week's Defender Fridays as Shane Warden, Principal Architect at ActiveState, shares what it's actually like to be on the receiving end of AI-assisted vulnerability reporting and what open source maintainers are already dealing with that the rest of the industry will face soon. At Defender Fridays, we delve into the dynamic world of information security, exploring its defensive side with seasoned professionals from across the industry. Our aim is simple yet ambitious: to foster a collaborative space where ideas flow freely, experiences are shared, and knowledge expands.

CurrentWare v12.0.2 Release | Smarter Productivity Tracking & Alerts

CurrentWare v12.0.2 release focuses on a single shift: Turning passive visibility into decision-ready intelligence. From energy cost visibility to fair productivity measurement, from real-time behavioral alerts to cloud first deployment, this update helps IT, security, HR, and operations leaders act faster, with more confidence and less friction.

Now Live: The CrowdStrike 2026 Financial Services Threat Landscape Report

The financial services industry is the fourth most-targeted sector globally, accounting for 12% of all observed activity. eCrime and nation-state adversaries spanning all motivations target these organizations due to their unique convergence of valuable assets, strategic intelligence, and geopolitical significance.

Optimize Zscaler Secure Internet Access (ZIA) Controls | Demo Video

Zscaler Secure Internet Access (ZIA) provides powerful secure access, inline inspection, decryption, and data loss prevention capabilities. But as your security and IT environments scale, and security controls change, Zscaler ZIA protections can drift away from established baselines, increasing your risk and leaving you open to attack. Reach analyzes your Zscaler ZIA controls to find and fix misconfigured controls, activate unused capabilities, and stop configuration drift. This hardens your defenses and protects you against fast-moving adversaries.

How to Manage Risks Within Your Applications

The security landscape has fundamentally changed, and many organizations haven’t caught up. If you’re still relying on quarterly scans, annual penetration tests, or spreadsheet-based vulnerability tracking to manage risks within your applications, you’re not managing risk. You’re documenting it after the fact.

Why AMOS matters: The macOS malware stealing data at scale

Sophos X-Ops looks at the Atomic macOS Stealer and its capabilities Sophos Managed Detection and Response (MDR) teams recently responded to a customer incident involving an infostealer infection on a macOS host. When we investigated, we found that the infostealer appeared to be a variant of AMOS (Atomic macOS), a well-known malware family we’ve written about before. The attack began with a ClickFix-style ruse, where a user was tricked into running a terminal command.

As compliance evolves, operational resilience becomes the real benchmark

The days when compliance was only a documentation exercise are long gone. Now, it’s a critical priority for a wide variety of organizations. But compliance is more of a result than a goal. The goal is achieving resilience. Cybersecurity and data protection regulations are rapidly evolving far beyond traditional compliance checklists. Global frameworks and regulations such as NIS 2, DORA, GDPR, HIPAA, SOX and NIST 2.0 are placing greater emphasis on operational resilience.

AI governance: a practical guide for enterprise leaders

It's 9:47 AM on a Tuesday. A Slack message from legal lands in the security channel: "Did anyone approve the marketing team's new AI vendor? They're feeding customer data into it." Nobody approved it. The vendor's terms say they can use input data for model training, and the contract was signed three weeks ago. That moment, some version of which plays out at most organizations now, is what makes AI governance an operational priority rather than a compliance exercise.

Inside the RubyGems Supply Chain Attack: How Mend Defender Caught a Coordinated Flood Before It Spread

On May 11, 2026, Mend Defender flagged more than 120 malicious packages newly published to RubyGems — the standard package manager for the Ruby ecosystem. Within 24 hours, that initial cluster expanded into something far larger: tens of thousands of packages pushed by thousands of attacker-controlled accounts, forcing RubyGems to suspend new account registration entirely while the cleanup got underway.