Assume the breach. Zero-days keep shipping, AI is writing exploits faster than anyone patches, and “patch everything in time” stopped working years ago. Stop betting the org on winning that race. You don’t control which bug lands. You control what it can reach once it does. That is a question about the shape of your…
Tag: anyone
AI, Apps, Cloud Security, Cybersecurity, Endpoint, Global Security News, Network Security, Risk Management, Venture
Four questions to answer if a security product will survive in the AI-first world
AI is changing the world faster than anyone could have predicted. This isn’t because it is taking over jobs (this would be too simplistic), but because it is slowly taking over a growing number of tasks that used to be done by humans. Security is not in any way immune to these changes, and I…
Global Security News, privacy, Risk Management
Eyes wide open: How to mitigate the security and privacy risks of smart glasses
Smart glasses allow anyone to track and record the world around them. That could put your data and the privacy of those nearby at risk.
AI, Compliance, Cybersecurity, Global Security News, Government & Policy, Network Security, privacy
Best AI Deepfake and Scam Detection Tools for Security in 2026
This guide is for security professionals, IT teams, and anyone concerned about AI-driven fraud who wants to detect deepfakes and scams in 2026. It covers some of the best tools available to identify fake videos, audio, and synthetic content. You can fake a video. You can clone a voice. You can even generate a “live”…
AI, Global Security News
The AI criminal mastermind is already hiring on gig platforms
Labor-hire platforms let anyone with a credit card post a task and pay a stranger to complete it. The RentAHuman platform extends that model to AI agents through a Model Context Protocol server, allowing an agent to post gigs directly. Listed tasks include attending in-person meetings, photographing locations, delivering items, and surveying physical sites. A…
AI, Compliance, Europe, Global Security News, privacy
GDPR works, but only where someone enforces it
A new measurement study of web tracking across ten countries offers a reality check for anyone working on privacy compliance. Researchers crawled the same set of globally popular websites from virtual machines located in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Germany, India, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, and California. The results show that European privacy law does…
Global Security News
ŌURA’s Sleep Data Confirms It: Aussies and Kiwis Are World-Class Sleepers With a Stress Problem
Australians and New Zealanders clock more sleep than anyone else on the planet. They’re also waking up earlier than almost every other country. And then spending their days absolutely drowning in stress with barely a break to recover.
AI, Global Security News
The Trillion Dollar Race to Automate Our Entire Lives
The AI sprint is hurtling toward a world where anyone can build personal concierges to do everything from executive presentations to March Madness brackets.
AI, Cybersecurity, Global Security News, malware, Network Security, privacy
Surfshark vs NordVPN (2026): Which VPN Wins? Full Breakdown
This guide is for anyone comparing Surfshark vs. NordVPN in 2026, breaking down their features, performance, pricing, and real-world use cases to help you choose the right VPN. On paper, Surfshark and NordVPN look almost identical, offering fast speeds, airtight security, and worldwide streaming access. But when I tested them, the results revealed a clear…
AI, Apps, Global Security News, Network Security
MWC: When it comes to 6G, Apple is a leader, not a follower
Does anyone remember when Apple was about to collapse because it didn’t offer 5G iPhones? Well, things have changed since then and as we make our way toward the 6G network transition expected in 2030 or so, Apple is ready to take part. How do I know this? Because Apple will have a presence at…
Global Security News, privacy
$10,000 bounty offered if you can hack Ring cameras to stop them sharing your data with Amazon
Amid a privacy backlash, a US $10,000 reward has been offered for anyone who can find a way to run Ring doorbell cameras locally, cutting off the flow of video data to Amazon’s servers. Read more in my article on the Hot for Security blog.
