Data exfiltration stories
Security teams can spot risky data movement before alerts fire, helping stop sensitive information from leaving approved channels.
Security teams gain rollback and policy controls as autonomous Claude agents begin writing and deploying code at machine speed.
Millions of downloads were exposed to silent code execution as a flaw in Hugging Face Transformers let malicious models run on load.
The rollout aims to help customers tame rising AI-driven complexity as Datadog adds autonomous monitoring, security and agent oversight tools.
Hackers are already stockpiling encrypted data for Q-Day, when quantum machines could break RSA and ECC in minutes.
The new feature targets shadow AI on laptops and desktops, helping security teams block data leaks before models can access sensitive files.
Enterprise security teams face a new visibility gap as approved AI agents can copy and transfer sensitive data in under 30 minutes.
Developers using npm could have secrets exposed as 176 malicious packages were set up to hijack dependency resolution and run postinstall malware.
The registry is tightening checks after malicious uploads exposed a gap between declared skill purpose and actual behaviour.
Enterprises get a single control layer for AI agents and data as Snowflake adds security and governance tools to curb errors and misuse.
Customers will get tighter controls and new streaming and interoperability features as Snowflake expands its platform around enterprise data.
Enterprises will get tighter AI controls as Snowflake adds blocking policies, multi-party authorisation and new agentic tools at Summit.
New silicon-level controls aim to curb unauthorised agent access and data exposure in enterprise AI storage, while keeping traffic fast.
Enterprises using AI tools may now face a tougher check on their defences as benchmark scores give way to real-world attack testing.
European ministries face a stealthier cyber-espionage campaign as Webworm shifts to Discord and Microsoft cloud tools to steal data.
Only 3% of Australian businesses have started preparing for post-quantum cryptography, leaving sensitive data exposed to harvest-now, decrypt-later attacks.
The new service aims to help firms keep pace as AI-powered criminals automate attacks faster than security teams can patch flaws.
Companies may be exposing sensitive data as staff use personal AI accounts for work nearly two-thirds of the time, researchers found.
Broader Claude access should help MIND sharpen data discovery and loss prevention for customers, after it joined Anthropic's cyber scheme.
The appointment signals a push to help regulated firms deploy AI agents without risking data leaks or unauthorised actions in sensitive systems.