The rapid delegation of complex business workflows to autonomous AI agents has revolutionized corporate productivity, yet it has simultaneously opened a sophisticated back door through the very protocols designed to facilitate tool interaction. As organizations integrate services like Microsoft 365 Copilot and Azure AI Foundry, they increasingly
The ongoing digital transformation of the industrial sector has created a massive security gap where millions of connected devices operate outside the protective umbrella of traditional corporate IT networks. This vulnerability is primarily driven by the proliferation of Internet of Things sensors and controllers that facilitate critical

Security teams are evaluating agentic AI because security operations need faster triage, investigation, and response. The appeal is clear: AI agents can work across alerts and data sources at machine speed. However, speed alone does not guarantee better decisions. For defensive AI, context determines whether an agent understands what it is seeing, why it matters, and what action is appropriate.

AI is being adopted across enterprise infrastructure faster than most security programs can respond. The result is a recognizable pattern: pilots stall, leaders question control, and business value sits idle while compliance reviews drag on. What security teams need is a security architecture built on Zero Trust, where identity, authorization, and containment are enforced at every request, every

The digital security landscape shifted violently this week when a massive repository of unpatched zero-day exploits, dubbed the Exploitarium, appeared on the public web without any prior warning to the affected software vendors. This collection, meticulously assembled by an independent security researcher operating under the pseudonym "bikini," contains more than thirty functional proof-of-concept exploits for high-profile software components, including the Linux kernel, the VLC media player, and the FFmpeg multimedia framework. The sudden
