The sudden emergence of high-risk vulnerabilities in foundational artificial intelligence components serves as a stark reminder that rapid innovation often outpaces the development of robust security protocols. As organizations rush to integrate large language models into their core operations, a fundamental weakness in the underlying vector
As we mark a quarter-century of innovation in physical access control, the landscape has shifted from standalone, site-specific hardware to interconnected, web-based ecosystems. Malik Haidar, a cybersecurity expert with extensive experience navigating the complex security needs of multinational corporations, joins us to discuss how the industry

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

Attackers do not beat the best tools. They beat the gaps between them. The average enterprise is awash in agents, logs, and dashboards. Yet the first thing that fails in a real incident is not the firewall or the endpoint. It is awareness. If a system, identity, or connection is invisible, it is effectively unprotected. That is the security story that keeps repeating across cloud, SaaS, remote

Digital defense infrastructures are currently buckling under the immense pressure of an unprecedented surge in security telemetry that far outpaces human processing capacity. As of 2026, the global cybersecurity workforce faces a staggering deficit of approximately 3.5 million workers, a gap that leaves organizations increasingly vulnerable to sophisticated threats. This labor shortage is compounded by "alert fatigue," a phenomenon where security analysts are overwhelmed by thousands of daily notifications, many of which are false positives or
