Security analytics stories
Security teams gain tighter endpoint oversight of shadow AI and sensitive data, as Fortinet folds new controls into FortiEndpoint from the third quarter.
Security teams now see autonomous AI as a bigger internal danger, even as most say it is boosting productivity, a survey found.
Rising Mac adoption has left many security teams short of Apple-specific expertise, prompting Jamf to add dedicated threat hunting and investigations.
Large firms are using security consulting to cut risk and costs, with IDC saying Mandiant customers gained USD $4.3 million a year on average.
Missed intrusions could cost more than false alarms, as Secure.com says AI tools in security operations can miss real attacks in live use.
The update gives Microsoft customers faster visibility into AI-driven access risks, after Netwrix linked broader identity footprints to higher breach rates.
Security leaders can now map team gaps more precisely as the platform adds crisis simulation, AI coaching and SOC training tools.
Almost half of ransomware victims discovered breaches only after data theft, underscoring how attackers are evading detection for weeks.
Teams under pressure from AI-driven telemetry growth can now query logs in object storage without indexing, cutting storage and search costs.
Security teams facing rising alert volumes can now use SentinelOne's autonomous investigations without extra tools or integrations through an opt-in trial.
It aims to help large organisations spot hidden control risks as roles, credentials and delegated access combine across fragmented systems.
Demand for AI security controls is rising as embedded tools in SaaS platforms expand the attack surface and strain security teams.
Security teams can now trace AI activity across employee and developer environments as Reco links Claude usage to permissions, keys and data paths.
The accolade underscores CrowdStrike's push to tie AI, endpoint and identity tools into a single security platform as rivals race to widen coverage.
The new service aims to help security teams cut alert overload and tool sprawl as firms seek faster response from one cloud platform.
The tie-up aims to help Australian organisations spot suspicious activity sooner as AI-driven systems and human users blur traditional security boundaries.
As AI spreads through core business functions, executives warn weak oversight could expose firms to deepfakes, fraud and costly incidents.
Rising alert volumes and staff shortages are pushing security teams towards AI tools that cut costs and speed investigations.
Korean banks and agencies can now keep security logs in-country as Google Cloud tries to ease compliance worries over cloud-based threat monitoring.
Security teams can now spot unmanaged devices and services on live traffic as Corelight extends Open NDR with passive asset classification.