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The zero-trust paradox: Why systems built to eliminate trust may be destroying it
The article by Shalini Sudarsan discusses the "zero-trust paradox,"
highlighting how security systems engineered to eliminate technical trust can
inadvertently erode genuine human and organizational trust. While the "never
trust, always verify" model successfully minimizes attack surfaces by assuming
continuous verification, micro-segmentation, and least-privilege access, it
creates unintended social friction. Employees subjected to persistent
authentication and exhaustive logging often feel targeted by surveillance
rather than protected by security, resulting in risk aversion, damaged morale,
and decreased experimentation. This technical paradigm is increasingly
expanding beyond network architectures into AI platforms,
productivity-tracking tools, and human resource systems, translating a
packet-inspection logic directly onto human interactions. Consequently,
decisions become opaque, unaccountable, and unappealable, inheriting
historical biases through automated algorithms. To mitigate this corrosive
effect, Sudarsan argues that leadership must intentionally separate a
necessary security posture from invasive behavioral surveillance.
Organizations must champion transparency and ensure that AI-driven
determinations offer explainable, human-comprehensible paths to
contestability. Ultimately, true organizational trust requires vulnerability
and human accountability, prompting boards to weigh technical protection
against its social costs to ensure cybersecurity doesn't mistake engineering
control for authentic workplace collaboration.Continuous adaptive trust: Sustaining trust in the age of continuous risk
Real-World ICS Security Tales From the Trenches
The SecurityWeek article highlights real-world experiences from industrial
control systems (ICS) and operational technology (OT) experts, exposing the
vast gap between written security policies and plant floor realities. Standard
risk assessments often fail to uncover these complex vulnerabilities. For
instance, Fortinet investigators discovered an Iranian-linked threat actor
utilizing an undocumented "n-day" vulnerability to repeatedly pivot from IT to
OT networks. In another scenario, a Frenos expert witnessed a compliance
officer trigger a catastrophic turbine shutdown at a power plant by deploying
conventional enterprise IT scanning tools in an unoptimized OT environment.
Similarly, a C1 assessment revealed critical, unpatched Solaris servers
governing field systems that were entirely exposed to the public internet
despite management assuming complete physical isolation. Additional field
accounts from BeyondTrust, ColorTokens, Tenable, Nozomi Networks, and Zero
Networks underscore the ubiquitous dangers of shadow IT, unapproved
open-source software, blind spots in passive tracking solutions, undetected
malware performing data exfiltration via DNS tunneling, and permissive
firewall configurations that seamlessly enable lateral movement. Ultimately,
these real-world anecdotes demonstrate that assuming networks are secure or
fully isolated without continuous empirical verification leaves critical
infrastructure highly susceptible to devastating cyberattacks and operational
failures.Agentic-Agile: Why Agent Development Needs Agile (Not Just Prompts)
The Microsoft blog post outlines "Agentic-Agile," a development methodology
designed to integrate AI coding agents as active contributors within
development teams rather than simple tools. While prompt-driven development
works well for small, isolated tasks, scaling AI agents across complex,
multi-module systems often results in predictable failures, including missing
backlogs, lack of defined exit criteria, non-deterministic outputs, and
delayed governance. This breakdown stems from process issues rather than model
deficiencies. To fix this, Agentic-Agile prioritizes a spec-first approach
utilizing structured documentation within repositories, such as markdown
context files and instructions mapped to specific issues. Every planned
capability must originate as a GitHub issue with clear acceptance criteria and
negative constraints to establish strict operational contracts for the agents.
Furthermore, the framework mandates early governance, incorporating automated
continuous integration (CI) pipelines, adversarial code reviews, and unit
tests directly into the initial stages of the backlog instead of treating them
as downstream phase afterthoughts. Ultimately, by shifting the discipline
toward contract-driven execution and incremental phased delivery,
Agentic-Agile reduces policy drift and prevents structural integration
failures, establishing a rigorous process for sustainable human-agent
partnerships.IoT 2.0: Why The Next Generation Of Connected Systems Needs More Than Just Connectivity
In this Forbes Tech Council article, Michael De Nil outlines the evolution
from traditional connected ecosystems to IoT 2.0, emphasizing that basic
connectivity is no longer sufficient for modern commercial operations. While
early IoT deployments functioned effectively by relying on infrequent,
low-bandwidth sensor pings, next-generation systems demand localized,
real-time data processing and immediate edge interpretation powered by
artificial intelligence. Consequently, legacy networks are creating severe
operational bottlenecks; low-power wide-area architectures like LoRaWAN lack
the throughput required for rich video or audio streams, whereas wide-area
cellular networks suffer from recurring subscription costs and high power
consumption. To bridge these operational gaps, organizations are deploying
scalable, localized wireless architectures such as Wi-Fi HaLow, which operate
over sub-GHz spectrum to maintain low energy use, IP-native security models,
and extended physical range. Designing these modern networks requires
prioritizing rich data outcomes over simple devices, minimizing architectural
translation layers, selecting open standards, and evaluating total cost of
ownership rather than just upfront hardware prices. Ultimately, this ongoing
paradigm shift completely redefines the Internet of Things, transforming
connected devices from passive, isolated data-gathering components into highly
context-aware, autonomous, and interconnected platforms capable of executing
immediate decisions across global industries.The Automation Layer Wants to Own Enterprise AI
Why some security fixes never reach your vulnerability dashboard
The CSO Online article explains that the traditional Common Vulnerabilities
and Exposures (CVE) framework, designed in 1999 to track code defects with
clear patches, is failing to capture modern software supply chain incidents
and artificial intelligence risks. Consequently, many crucial security fixes
never reach corporate vulnerability dashboards. Originally structured for
static software flaws, the CVE framework is increasingly stretched to track
retroactive security incidents and massive malicious supply chain campaigns
that entirely lack traditional code defects. This outmoded tracking system
completely breaks down against complex AI agent architectures and shared
skills, which mutate dynamically at runtime and inflict behavioral harm rather
than memory corruptions or code-level exploits. For instance, the ClawSwarm
campaign quietly enrolls target agents into rogue external networks using
legitimate SDKs, leaving traditional software scanners completely blind.
Furthermore, frontier AI model vendors frequently deploy vital security fixes
or system prompt safeguards silently within broader capability upgrades
without issuing formal advisories or version bumps. To remedy this structural
drift, the author advocates for a new signal layer utilizing behavioral
identifiers over static artifact tracking, registry transparency for ecosystem
takedowns, and honest vendor disclosures. Ultimately, because modern
dashboards rely on this artifact-centric threat model, they offer defenders an
increasingly incomplete defensive picture.Advisories Are Now Exploit Specs. Act Accordingly
AI deepfakes push biometric industry toward measurable assurance
The Biometric Update article details how the rise of AI deepfakes and
sophisticated injection attacks, which escalated by 1,151 percent over the
past year according to data from iProov, is driving a paradigm shift in the
biometrics industry. Driven by the rapid industrialization of digital fraud,
governments and corporate entities are transitioning away from mere vendor
accuracy claims toward independently verified performance and rigorous
certification standards. Testing experts from iProov and Ingenium Biometric
Laboratories explain that traditional banking level security and basic human
visual checks can no longer keep up with high-fidelity, real-time deepfakes
that completely bypass camera sensors. Consequently, the industry focus has
fundamentally shifted from proving basic liveness to confirming genuine
presence. This modern requirement demands proof that a user is actively
present at the exact point of video capture and that the underlying data
stream remains entirely uncompromised. Landmark regulatory frameworks like the
European Union's eIDAS and updated NIST Digital Identity Guidelines are
solidifying these strict conformity requirements globally. Because digital
identity has become foundational critical infrastructure for the global
economy, organizations require transparent, multi-layered testing environments
rather than superficial certificates to ensure true measurable assurance.
Ultimately, sector leaders emphasize that no single test tells the full story,
meaning organizations must combine independent validations with transparent
governance to sustain trust.






















