Incident Response stories
Businesses relying only on endpoint tools could miss more than 137,000 network attacks, as perimeter threats took a larger share in 2025.
Security teams could reclaim hours on routine tasks as Tenable’s new AI engine automates asset tagging, reporting and health checks across mixed estates.
Security teams can now buy incident response and threat hunting on demand as CrowdStrike rolls out consumption-based services for partners and customers.
The latest data showed 635 ransomware incidents in February, but CL0P and The Gentlemen rose sharply as the threat landscape shifted.
Security teams can now build custom AI agents in Falcon as CrowdStrike opens its platform to partners including Accenture, AWS and OpenAI.
Smaller firms could cut security costs as embedded detection and automated response reduce the need for extra hardware or specialist staff.
The move gives the policy group a stronger voice on data resilience and AI governance as governments weigh new cybersecurity rules.
Security teams gain a forensic trail and workflow hub as Vorlon adds incident response tools for AI agents across SaaS apps and APIs.
Nearly all surveyed CISOs said they faced SaaS or AI security incidents in 2025, even as most rated their controls as strong.
The update could help teams restore dashboards and alerts after outages, reducing the risk of losing visibility when systems fail.
Security teams will gain visibility into AI agents in production, with new runtime controls aimed at spotting misuse, shadow AI and compromise paths.
Enterprises could spot compromised maintainers sooner, as the new tool maps open-source contributors, dependencies and policy breaches across builds.
Audit teams can now trace mobile app controls over time, as the new workspace records policy changes, builds and approvals in one place.
Mental health absences could have already cost cyber teams more than 250,000 work days, threatening monitoring and incident response.
Enterprise security teams could cut nuisance alarms as Brivo and Cobalt AI combine access, video and sensor data in one workflow.
The two-hour glitch exposed company and user data to unauthorised staff, fuelling calls for tighter controls over autonomous agents.
Most firms cannot tell AI agent activity from human use, leaving access controls strained as autonomous software spreads across production systems.
Customers may get faster breach containment as the pair link AI detection with managed response across endpoint, cloud and identity systems.
Expel unveils managed SIEM for Microsoft Sentinel and Splunk, embedding its engineers to tune detections and cut operational overheads.
Phishing and malware activity has doubled in Gulf markets since late February, with attackers exploiting conflict themes to target finance and energy links.