Incident Response stories
Cloud teams can now investigate incidents and fix risks inside coding tools, as Sysdig shifts security work from dashboards to AI agents.
Live endpoint data will now feed ServiceNow workflows, aiming to cut incident response times and automate patching across large fleets.
Managed service providers could cut alert backlogs as WatchGuard’s new AI agent takes on threat detection and response across client networks.
Many firms still cannot stop intrusions, even as AI is now implicated in most reported breaches and security budgets keep rising.
Security teams could cut investigation times as the new platform triages alerts and embeds threat intelligence into existing workflows.
It aims to cut outage investigation time for engineers by combining live telemetry with incident history, changes and service context.
The tie-up could cut downtime for enterprises by letting AI detect incidents, generate playbooks and trigger fixes across hybrid estates.
AI-driven attacks are exposing weak passwords on cameras and access controls, prompting calls for stricter governance across physical security systems.
Enterprises using Microsoft Defender will get round-the-clock human-led threat hunting, as CrowdStrike also broadens its AI risk coalition across partners.
Pressure to simplify fragmented security tools is driving BlueVoyant’s leadership shake-up as John Hernandez takes over as Chief Executive Officer.
Attackers were exploiting a critical Weaver E-cology flaw within five days of the vendor patch, Vega said, with repeated attempts blocked.
The ranking highlights growing demand for intelligence that can guide detection and response inside security tools, rather than stand-alone reports.
Security teams facing rising alert volumes now have a guide for deciding which tasks AI should handle and which need human control.
Rising phishing, smishing and social engineering attacks are exposing connected cameras and access systems to credential theft, Genetec says.
Yet only 15 per cent have deployed OT-specific visibility tools, even as cyber incidents have already disrupted critical systems for most respondents.
Vulnerability exploitation has collapsed from years to hours, leaving organisations racing to fix exposed systems before attackers do.
Security teams could cut alert backlogs, while enterprises gain a way to inspect AI skills for hidden tampering and backdoors.
Banks and fintechs are being pushed to sharpen cyber defences as AI threats and operational knock-on effects test the UK payments system.
Security teams are being forced into faster triage as AI shortens the gap between flaw disclosure and attack to hours.
Most Australian firms expect AI agents to outrun security controls within a year, as only 22 per cent say they can fully see them.