Incident Response stories
Attackers are now moving fast enough that patching delays, standing privilege and inherited trust leave organisations exposed within minutes.
Enterprises facing rising cyber risk will gain a single view of alerts and business impact as the firms combine security data and AI analytics.
Existing customers can now get AI-assisted threat hunting and response without extra cost, as attacks are moving faster than manual investigations.
One in three emails flagged in Barracuda's study was malicious, as AI and phishing kits helped drive more account takeovers.
AI systems and social engineering tests proved especially risky, as CyberCX found severe weaknesses in half and 77% of cases respectively.
The funding will help the cyber security start-up expand in Japan and Europe as it pushes AI tools to cut investigation times and false positives.
A smaller band of operators is driving most incidents, leaving companies facing fewer but more organised ransomware gangs.
The listing could speed procurement for defence buyers seeking pre-evaluated tools for secure deployment across complex NATO environments.
Experts say AI is accelerating ransomware attacks, shrinking the patching window and forcing organisations to overhaul defences and recovery plans.
Security teams face a broader threat as criminals and state-backed actors use generative AI to speed hacks, phishing and malware.
Small businesses can now automate on-premise network checks with AI agents, without exposing monitoring data to outside cloud services.
As Kubernetes deployments spread, operators are under pressure to cut incident times and pin down faults across complex cloud estates.
Its top-tier vendor status signals rising demand for integrated security systems in data centres and critical infrastructure across Australia and New Zealand.
It aims to reduce alert fatigue for security teams, with one beta customer processing 14 million daily alerts in minutes instead of hours.
Rising scam losses in Singapore are pushing police tech investment, as the pair plan forensic and AI tools to speed investigations.
Thailand has joined the ransomware top 10 as fewer groups now drive most attacks, raising the cost of each breach for businesses.
Despite welcome AI funding, tech leaders say small firms still lack the cyber defences needed to adopt new tools safely.
Ransomware is hitting Australian large businesses harder than global peers, with most victims still paying attackers despite backup defences.
Ransomware pressure on Canadian firms is intensifying as AI speeds attacks, with 374 organisations extorted and losses mounting.
Business leaders say burnout is a hard financial risk, urging employers to build mental health into job design, leadership and daily operations.