Malik Haidar is a veteran cybersecurity strategist who has spent decades navigating the complex intersection of technical defense and corporate intelligence. With a career built on securing multinational infrastructures against high-stakes threats, he specializes in translating abstract vulnerabilities into actionable business risk assessments.
The quiet infiltration of thousands of interconnected household devices has shifted from a chaotic sprint for dominance to a calculated game of digital endurance. Masjesu, also known as XorBot, has redefined the expectations for IoT-based threats by prioritizing staying power over the immediate, loud gratification of a massive infection wave.

The ransomware playbook has changed. Encryption is no longer the main pain point; stolen data is. Criminal groups are monetizing breaches twice: first by locking systems, then by threatening to publish or sell confidential information. That pressure campaign works because the business fallout is harsher than downtime alone. It hits regulatory exposure, litigation risk, and public trust all at

The rapid integration of sophisticated artificial intelligence and interconnected supply chains has fundamentally altered the vulnerability profile of the modern enterprise, rendering traditional perimeter-based security models obsolete in the face of state-sponsored hybrid threats. As of early 2026, the European Union has responded to this volatility by introducing a legislative package

The fundamental vulnerability of the corporate enterprise no longer resides in the server room but in the unassuming lines of text arriving in an employee's inbox every second. While legacy defenses were designed to catch the digital equivalent of a blunt-force trauma—viruses and malicious links—today’s threat actors have pivoted toward psychological warfare. By 2026, the shift from "bad content" to "bad intent" has become the defining challenge for cybersecurity professionals. The layered email security model has emerged not mer
