[2026 Report] Only 34% CISOs' Staff Staying Put
CISOs, your team's jumping ship. Only 34% sticking around, per the latest report. Time to get aggressive—or watch your defenses crumble.
Everyone expected Formula 1's digital expansion to bring new ways to engage with the sport. What they didn't count on was fraudsters building an entire ecosystem around it, targeting passionate fans with everything from fake tickets to malware-laden streaming apps.
CISOs, your team's jumping ship. Only 34% sticking around, per the latest report. Time to get aggressive—or watch your defenses crumble.
Your stolen password isn't just a minor slip-up—it's hackers' favorite door-kicker, involved in nearly a quarter of 2025 breaches. Zero Trust promises to slam it shut, but does it deliver for the average IT grunt fighting real fires?
Your Pixel 10's modem just got a Rust shield against DNS hacks that could spy on your calls. Finally, Google admits C's memory bugs are a disaster waiting to happen.
Anthropic's Mythos isn't just powerful—it's rewriting cyberattack timelines, smashing the gap between spotting flaws and striking. The Cloud Security Alliance says CISOs better get 'Mythos-ready' fast, or watch defenses crumble.
Cloud security's getting a 2026 makeover—or so Rapid7 says at their summit. I've seen this movie before; let's cut through the buzz.
Right as UK firms scream about cyber skills gaps, the Cyber Security Council drops a shiny new 'Associate' title. But after 20 years watching this circus, I'm asking: credentials or just another hoop?
Imagine your AI empire's signing keys brushing shoulders with North Korean malware. OpenAI just did—and revoked everything to be safe.
Imagine clicking a fake Claude AI site, only for malware to burrow into your machine like a digital tick. Last week's security news exploded with threats from AI fakes to robot killers—here's the chaos, unpacked.
Ten hours. That's all it took for attackers to weaponize a gaping hole in Marimo, the hot Python notebook tool with 20k GitHub stars. Sysdig caught them in the act, swiping secrets like it was nothing.
You've tapped 'allow' without a second thought. That's handing hackers the keys to your digital life—contacts, location, even your mic.
Imagine malware that's not just smart—it's *conversing* with AI to outsmart your phone's swipes. PromptSpy does exactly that, marking the dawn of generative AI in Android threats.
Imagine downloading your trusty CPU-Z to check your rig's specs—only to hand attackers your entire desktop. That's what hit over 150 users when CPUID's site got pwned, serving STX RAT malware in trojanized installers.