Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

This 'caveman' trick will slash your AI costs #ai #tokeneconomics #trending

One simple prompt change, asking an AI to respond like a caveman with shorter sentences and fewer words, reportedly cut token spend by 75 percent. It is a funny example, but it points to a bigger issue, AI efficiency and cost control will matter far more as usage spreads.

Our AI Agent Now Has a Security Conscience: Introducing the JFrog Plugin for Claude Code

AI coding agents are changing the pace of software development. With tools like Claude Code, developers can move from idea to implementation faster than ever, generating code, exploring unfamiliar repositories, refactoring services, and turning plain-language intent into working software. That speed is powerful. But speed without governance = risk. It also creates a new challenge: how can you govern what an AI agent builds, suggests, and pulls in from the internet?

The Governance Gap: What IDC's 2026 Data Reveals About AI and the Software Supply Chain

In a landscape where executive teams demand immediate AI integration, engineering and security leaders find themselves navigating a complex operational balancing act. To explore how organizations can accelerate delivery pipelines without introducing fatal security risks, JFrog recently hosted a virtual panel discussion titled “Agentic Software Delivery in 2026.

Grounding the AI SOC: The Context Graph Problem

See how Torq harnesses AI in your SOC to detect, prioritize, and respond to threats faster. Request a Demo David Melamed is Head of Emerging Technologies at Torq. He joined through Torq’s acquisition of Jit, which he co-founded and led as CTO since 2020, building agentic security on a production Context Graph. A cloud security veteran with 20+ years of experience, David previously held senior technical roles at Cisco (via the CloudLock acquisition) and MyHeritage.

How visual embeddings leak identity and how to fix it

CVPR 2026 paper overview with research scientist Daniel George, a coauthor of “From Measurement to Mitigation: Quantifying and Reducing Identity Leakage in Image Representation Encoders with Linear Subspace Removal." He discusses some of Persona’s recent research efforts, embeddings, and the paper’s focus. The paper was accepted to the Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) 2026, a premier conference in computer vision and machine learning.

Securing Your AI Agents: Today's New Data Threat

AI agents are already inside your company - reading files, calling APIs, executing code. Most of them were never approved by security. In this session, Nightfall AI walks through exactly how agents become an attack surface: prompt injection, malicious MCP servers, credential exfiltration, and more.

Beyond Prevention: Frontier AI and the Shift to Cyber Resilience

Frontier AI is compressing the time between vulnerability discovery and exploitation, making reactive security strategies harder to sustain. In this webinar, Roland Cloutier (Former CISO of of ByteDance & TikTok, ADP, and EMC) and Gabi Reish discuss how security leaders can move beyond patching everything to prioritize real risk, measure cyber readiness, and communicate security posture to the board.

WatchGuard Earns Eight TrustRadius Top Rated Awards for 2026

We're proud to share that WatchGuard has been recognized with eight TrustRadius Top Rated Awards for 2026, highlighting our continued commitment to delivering powerful, practical cybersecurity solutions that help organizations and managed service providers stay secure in an increasingly complex threat landscape. TrustRadius Top Rated Awards are based entirely on verified customer feedback.

Cato CTRL Threat Research: From Fiscal Lures to Remote Access, A Previously Undocumented NinjaOne RMM Abuse Chain

Cato CTRL researchers recently identified an undocumented, active phishing campaign targeting Brazilian organizations with fake business-document lures, downloading a NinjaOne Remote Monitoring and Management (RMM) agent. The use of NinjaOne is particularly significant, underscoring how attackers no longer need exotic malware to penetrate an enterprise. Familiar business workflows and software is enough.