Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

CISOs need decision-grade risk intelligence, not another workflow

In large enterprises, the hardest security decisions are rarely made in the SOC. They are made in board meetings, budget reviews, audit discussions, customer escalations. The most dire are often represented in the moments when leaders have to decide what matters now, what can wait, and what risk the business is actually taking on. The real GRC problem is no longer how to manage more work. It is how to help the business make better decisions with higher confidence. CISOs do not need another workflow.

Your Audit-Ready PCI DSS Compliance Checklist for 2026

Analysts summarized by the PCI Security Standards Council found that breaches in scope for PCI frequently involved card data. Teams already know the risk. The hard part is proving, month after month, that the controls around that data stayed in place and kept working. That is why many PCI DSS audits stall in the same places: scattered evidence, undocumented scope changes, firewall rules that drifted after a change window, and logs that exist but were never centralized.

How to Monitor and Manage User Sessions in Drupal

Most Drupal security strategies focus on protecting user accounts before login. Organizations invest in strong passwords, multi-factor authentication (MFA), and Single Sign-On (SSO) to prevent unauthorized access. While these controls are important, security risks do not disappear once a user successfully authenticates. Users may remain logged in for extended periods, share credentials with others, access accounts from multiple devices simultaneously, or leave active sessions unattended.

Route public traffic to private applications with Cloudflare

For most of the Internet’s history, public and private infrastructure operated as separate worlds. Public applications lived behind content delivery networks (CDNs) and web application firewalls (WAFs). Private applications lived behind virtual private networks (VPNs), firewalls, and separate operational stacks. We think that distinction is becoming obsolete.

Claude Fable 5 and the New Reality of AI-Enabled Third-Party Risk

Anthropic recently announced the release of Claude Fable 5, a public version of its more powerful Mythos AI model. Technology that was previously only accessible to a select few organizations is now available to businesses at an enterprise level. AI vendors are building the guardrails while threat actors are studying their attack vectors. Essentially, we are giving the keys to the AI world to businesses and hoping the guardrails hold steady. Security teams need to prepare even faster now.

Black Hat Asia 2026: Everything from cat feeders to solar farms

There is a saying you will hear from veterans in the Black Hat Network Operations Center (NOC): “Threat hunting on the Black Hat network is like trying to find a needle in a stack of needles." With dozens of training classes running live exploit chains, capture-the-flag traffic, and researchers probing every corner of the internet, our Corelight sensors generate a rich set of Zeek logs, many of which can look suspicious in varying degrees.

Code is being written everywhere, and the device is the only constant

This post is based on Mackenzie's conversation with James Hawkins on The Secure Disclosure podcast. Listen to the full episode or watch below. PostHog's engineering team is merging roughly as many pull requests through Slack as through their code editor. As James Hawkins, co-founder and co-CEO of PostHog, explains on the podcast, the shift towards dispersed coding interfaces is underway. "Why are code editors all desktop apps right now? That's a relic of the past.

SBOMs in 2026: Everyone's generating them, no one's using them

ENISA just published its SBOM Adoption State of Play 2026, based on a survey of 334 organizations (65% EU-based, 80% directly impacted by the Cyber Resilience Act (CRA)). It is the clearest snapshot yet of where the industry stands on software supply chain transparency, and the picture is more nuanced than "everyone's on board." Here's what stood out.