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Cloud strategies have become more complicated than ever
Managing enterprise cloud infrastructure has shifted from simple migrations to
navigating a complex web of cost, regulation, and technical demands. While IT
leaders once felt they had cloud setups under control, the sudden rush to adopt
artificial intelligence has upended traditional architecture models, requiring
massive compute power and driving up expenses. Beyond the strain of artificial
intelligence, companies are trying to figure out exactly where workloads should
live, whether that means using public servers, private platforms, or returning
some systems back to local data centers. Budgeting has also turned into a
significant headache, as intricate vendor pricing structures can cause
unexpected spikes in monthly bills. This has forced technology and accounting
teams to work together much more closely to continually monitor spending rather
than reviewing it after the fact. Meanwhile, strict international data
sovereignty laws add more friction, forcing organizations to carefully track
where information is stored and processed to meet local legal requirements.
Experts suggest that instead of chasing every new technical trend, leaders
should focus on stable infrastructure planning, clear internal rules, and
building flexible teams that can pivot when conditions change. Ultimately, the
primary goal is no longer just about moving to the cloud, but learning how to
run it efficiently and sustainably over the long term.Digital identity must be built for interoperability from day one, says Margins CEO
7 tabletop exercise mistakes that sabotage incident response
Tabletop exercises are excellent for refining incident response strategies,
provided you avoid common pitfalls that compromise their value. The most
frequent misstep is running simulations without clear, measurable goals.
Without specific targets, exercises drift into vague discussions rather than
testing critical processes like legal notifications or executive decision
rights. Another error is relying on familiar scenarios with obvious solutions.
Real incidents are messy and ambiguous, so providing incomplete information
helps teams practice decision-making under uncertainty instead of just
recalling a playbook. Similarly, failing to design business-relevant hazards
can make the exercise feel like a chore. Simulations must reflect your actual
environment, industry threats, and include all relevant stakeholders to be
effective. If scenarios lack plausible technical details, participants may
dismiss them as a waste of time. You should also avoid guiding teams down a
predefined happy path, as this emphasizes simple recall rather than true
problem-solving. Furthermore, keeping exercises too conceptual ignores the
friction points that happen during real crises, such as figuring out who has
the authority to isolate critical systems. Finally, overlooking internal
dependencies builds false confidence. To ensure actual readiness, you need to
test the specific handoffs and communication chains unique to your business
rather than relying on a generic blueprint.
Europe’s sovereign cloud has a blind spot
Europe is spending billions to build a digital sovereign cloud, introducing
rigorous security certifications like France’s SecNumCloud to shield regional
data from U.S. legal reach. However, these efforts completely overlook a
critical hardware vulnerability. Almost all of this certified cloud
infrastructure runs on Intel or AMD processors, which feature hidden built-in
management engines that operate entirely outside the control of standard
operating systems or firewalls. Because recent U.S. surveillance laws now
explicitly cover hardware manufacturers, companies like Intel and AMD can be
legally forced to grant American intelligence agencies access to these
systems, regardless of where the servers are located or who manages them.
Since these embedded engines function autonomously with their own memory and
network connections, they bypass the software and organizational safeguards
that European certifications rely on. Security experts warn that this creates
a fundamental blind spot, as any traffic they generate is practically
invisible to normal monitoring tools. While some argue that strict network
isolation can limit this exposure, others emphasize that motivated
nation-states could easily bypass these defenses. Ultimately, until
competitive open-source hardware alternatives like RISC-V become a reality,
Europe is attempting to build an independent, sovereign cloud infrastructure
on top of hardware foundations it does not truly control.Why AI Will Move to the Endpoint
Artificial intelligence is gradually transitioning from remote cloud servers
directly to local devices, driven by the need to resolve high processing costs
and significant privacy concerns. Currently, running models in the cloud
requires sending sensitive data outside a company network, which introduces
risk and steep operating expenses. However, hardware advances are making local
processing practical. Modern computers now include specialized processors
capable of handling smaller, optimized language models directly on the device.
Moving artificial intelligence to user devices provides concrete benefits,
including offline functionality, faster response times, and stronger security,
as data never leaves the local machine. It also allows the software to adapt
more closely to an individual's specific work habits, improving overall
efficiency and reducing the burden on technical support teams. While setting
up these local systems manually remains complex today, organizations can
overcome this by adopting an integrated management approach. A structured
setup would include components for handling data, managing the lifecycle of
the models, and enforcing strict security controls. By establishing this
coordinated architecture, companies can avoid hidden or uncontrolled software
usage. Ultimately, adopting local artificial intelligence eliminates recurring
cloud fees and keeps sensitive information secure, giving teams a practical
way to safely apply these tools to their daily work.Better Than the Truth: From AI Hallucinations to Imaginations
While artificial intelligence hallucinations are widely viewed as problematic
errors that can damage professional reputations and spread false information,
they might actually hold practical value. When a system generates plausible
but incorrect responses, it usually stems from limited data and a design that
prioritizes coherent answers over exact facts. Naturally, this causes
frustration in fields requiring strict accuracy, such as law and medicine.
However, these unintended inventions can sometimes spark genuine creativity.
Rather than simply dismissing them as mistakes, we can view them as a form of
automated imagination. For example, when artificial intelligence fabricates a
trend or invents a realistic book title based on a writer's background, it can
inspire researchers to explore ideas they might not have considered otherwise.
This suggests a potential future where software offers a deliberate
imagination feature alongside traditional factual searches. If developers
separate functions that search for facts from creative generation, users could
intentionally ask systems to invent alternate histories, draft narratives from
past events, or predict unconventional future scenarios. By doing so, the flaw
of generating false data becomes a useful tool. Instead of restricting
artificial intelligence strictly to established facts, allowing it to imagine
could help people see the world from different perspectives and enrich their
own thinking.
Why Firms Struggle With Vendor Security After They Sign
A recent study by the research firm KLAS shows that while healthcare
organizations are improving at vetting third party vendors before signing
contracts, they still struggle significantly to monitor those partners'
security over the long term. This lack of continuous oversight represents a
major safety flaw, especially since a prior survey revealed that three out of
four healthcare organizations suffered a vendor related data breach within a
brief two year window. The study indicates that companies pour substantial
resources into initial evaluations but frequently neglect checking on partners
after the deal is done. Consequently, unexpected risks crop up later through
regular software updates, business disruptions, or shifting safety rules.
Security experts point to several common internal issues causing this
disconnect, including a lack of executive leadership support, an absence of
organized systems to prioritize high risk partners, and insufficient tracking
of sensitive patient records. Furthermore, many organizations fail to strictly
mandate or enforce standard technical protections like multifactor
authentication and data encryption. These oversight gaps are particularly
severe for smaller healthcare providers, which generally have fewer resources
but often serve as easy entry points for digital attackers trying to reach
larger networks. Ultimately, the report emphasizes that organizational senior
executives and boards of directors hold full responsibility for addressing
these ongoing vendor threats.
The Hidden Knowledge Debt Behind QA Outsourcing
n an article for Software Testing Magazine, Ann-Sofie Ollikainen outlines the
hidden risks companies face when they outsource software quality assurance
solely to lower operational costs. While third-party providers often promise
guaranteed quality based on predefined test cases and standardized metrics,
this transactional approach creates an invisible liability known as knowledge
debt. By shifting testing to external teams, organizations lose the deep
product context and historical understanding that internal teams develop
through long-term exposure to a system. External testers can technically
fulfill their contract requirements by running standard tests, yet they
frequently miss complex, structural defects because they do not understand why
specific features were built a certain way. This systemic loss of context
eventually leads to costly consequences, including repeated software
regressions, delayed product releases, slow problem-solving, and consumer
frustration. The author notes that organizations do not need to abandon
outsourcing entirely, but they must stop treating software testing as a mere
checkbox at the end of a project. Instead, sustainable software quality
requires a careful balance between immediate cost savings and long-term
product stability, ensuring that testing remains deeply connected to the
overall development process, business requirements, and product evolution over
time.
AI is shrinking attack windows, and it’s forcing a complete rethink of cyber resilience
The ITPro article outlines how the rapid acceleration of AI is reshaping
corporate cybersecurity by significantly shortening remediation windows.
Advanced models are discovering system vulnerabilities at an unprecedented
rate, enabling threat actors to automate and launch exploits almost instantly.
Security experts argue that this dramatic collapse in traditional response
times makes cyber resilience a fundamental daily operational requirement
rather than a plan used only after an incident occurs. To navigate this
changing threat landscape securely, organizations are advised to implement a
structured resilience framework based on four distinct steps. First, companies
should evaluate their recovery risks by thoroughly analyzing how existing
continuity plans hold up under rapid digital disruption. Second, isolating
critical backups from main corporate networks ensures clean fallback options
if defensive patching routines cannot keep pace. Third, teams must establish
strict recovery priorities for business critical services, taking care to map
out modern infrastructure components like data pipelines and machine learning
repositories. Finally, automating threat scanning and system restoration helps
reduce human delay while maintaining thorough, regular testing schedules. By
adopting these pragmatic, continuous validation measures, businesses can
confidently secure their essential operations and handle the complexities of
evolving software tools without overwhelming their defensive capabilities.














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