Quote for the day:
"Successful leaders see the opportunities in every difficulty rather than the difficulty in every opportunity" -- Reed Markham
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Testing autonomous agents (Or: how I learned to stop worrying and embrace chaos)
The VentureBeat article "Testing autonomous agents (Or: how I learned to stop
worrying and embrace chaos)" explores the critical shift from simple chatbots
to autonomous AI agents that function more like independent employees. As
agents gain the power to execute actions without human confirmation, the
authors argue that "plausible" reasoning is no longer sufficient; systems must
instead be engineered for graceful failure and absolute reliability. To
achieve this, a four-layered architecture is proposed: high-quality model
selection, deterministic guardrails using traditional validation logic,
confidence quantification to identify ambiguity, and comprehensive
observability for auditing reasoning chains. Reliability is further reinforced
by defining clear permission, semantic, and operational boundaries to limit
the "blast radius" of potential errors. The article emphasizes that
traditional software testing is inadequate for probabilistic systems,
advocating instead for simulation environments, red teaming, and "shadow mode"
deployments where agents’ decisions are compared against human actions.
Ultimately, building enterprise-grade autonomy requires a risk-based
investment in safeguards and a rethink of organizational accountability,
ensuring that human-in-the-loop patterns remain a central safety mechanism as
these systems navigate the complex, often unpredictable reality of production
environments.NIST updates its DNS security guidance for the first time in over a decade
NIST has released Special Publication 800-81r3, the Secure Domain Name System
Deployment Guide, marking its first significant update to DNS security
standards in over twelve years. This comprehensive revision addresses the
modern threat landscape by focusing on three critical pillars: utilizing DNS
as an active security control, securing protocols, and hardening
infrastructure. A central theme is the implementation of protective DNS
(PDNS), which empowers organizations to analyze queries and block access to
malicious domains proactively. The guide provides technical advice on
deploying encrypted DNS protocols like DNS over TLS, HTTPS, and QUIC to ensure
data privacy and integrity. Furthermore, it modernizes DNSSEC recommendations
by favoring efficient cryptographic algorithms like ECDSA and Edwards-curve
over legacy RSA methods. Organizational hygiene is also prioritized, with
strategies to mitigate risks like dangling CNAME records and lame delegations
that lead to domain hijacking. By advocating for the separation of
authoritative and recursive functions and geographic dispersal, NIST aims to
bolster the resilience of network connections. This updated framework serves
as an essential roadmap for cybersecurity leaders and technical teams tasked
with maintaining secure, future-proof DNS environments in an increasingly
complex digital ecosystem.
The insider threat rises again
The article "The Insider Threat Rises Again" examines the escalating risks posed
by internal actors in modern organizations. Driven by evolving technologies and
shifting work dynamics, insider incidents have become increasingly frequent and
costly, with 42% of organizations reporting a rise in both malicious and
negligent cases over the past year. The financial impact is staggering,
averaging $13.1 million per incident. Today's threat landscape is multifaceted,
encompassing deliberate sabotage, inadvertent errors, and the emergence of
"coerced insiders" targeted via social media or the dark web. Remote work has
exacerbated these risks by lowering psychological barriers to data exfiltration,
while AI enables data theft at an unprecedented scale. Furthermore, the article
highlights sophisticated tactics like North Korean operatives posing as fake IT
workers to gain persistent network access. To combat these threats, experts
argue that traditional perimeter security is no longer sufficient. Organizations
must instead adopt adaptive controls that monitor high-risk actions in real-time
and create friction at the point of data access. Moving beyond managing human
behavior, effective security now requires meeting users at the point of risk to
identify and block suspicious activity regardless of the actor's credentials.
25 Years of the Agile Manifesto, and the End of the Road for AppSec?
In the article "25 Years of the Agile Manifesto and the End of the Road for AppSec," the author reflects on how the evolution of software development has rendered traditional Application Security (AppSec) models obsolete. Since the inception of the Agile Manifesto, the industry has shifted from slow, monolithic release cycles to rapid, continuous delivery. The core argument is that conventional AppSec—often characterized by "gatekeeping," manual reviews, and siloed security teams—cannot keep pace with the velocity of modern DevOps. This friction creates a bottleneck that developers frequently bypass to meet deadlines, ultimately compromising security. The piece suggests that we have reached the "end of the road" for security as a separate, reactionary phase. Instead, the future lies in "shifting left" and "shifting everywhere," where security is fully integrated into the CI/CD pipeline through automation and developer-centric tools. By empowering developers to take ownership of security within their existing workflows, organizations can achieve the speed promised by Agile without sacrificing safety. Ultimately, the article calls for a cultural and technical transformation where AppSec evolves from a final checkpoint into an invisible, continuous component of the software development lifecycle, ensuring resilience in an increasingly fast-paced digital landscape.The era of cheap technology could be over
The article suggests that the long-standing era of affordable consumer and
enterprise technology is drawing to a close, primarily driven by an
unprecedented global shortage of critical hardware components. This shift is
largely attributed to the explosive growth of artificial intelligence, which
has created an insatiable demand for high-performance processors, memory, and
solid-state storage. Manufacturers are increasingly prioritizing high-margin
AI-specific hardware over commodity components used in PCs, smartphones, and
servers, leading to significant price hikes. Market analysts predict a
dramatic surge in DRAM and SSD prices, with some estimates suggesting a 130%
increase by the end of the year. Consequently, shipments for personal
computers and mobile devices are expected to decline as manufacturing costs
become prohibitive. Beyond the AI boom, the crisis is exacerbated by
post-pandemic market cycles and geopolitical tensions that continue to
destabilize global supply chains. To navigate this new landscape, IT leaders
are being forced to rethink procurement strategies, opting for data cleansing,
tiered storage solutions, and extending the lifecycle of existing hardware.
Ultimately, while these shortages strain budgets, they may encourage more
disciplined data management practices as businesses adapt to a more expensive
technological environment.The AI era of incident response: What autonomous operations mean for enterprise IT
Securing Automation: Why the Specification Stage Is the Right Time to Embed OT Cybersecurity
Manufacturers today are rapidly adopting automation to meet rising demand, yet
a significant gap remains in cybersecurity investment, often leaving
operational technology (OT) vulnerable. This article argues that the most
effective remedy is to embed security requirements directly into the initial
specification phase of projects. By integrating specific, testable criteria
into Requests for Proposals (RFPs), security becomes a contractually
enforceable deliverable rather than a costly afterthought. Effective
requirements must adhere to six key attributes: they should be achievable,
unambiguous, concise, complete, singular, and verifiable. This structured
approach allows for rigorous validation during Factory Acceptance Testing
(FAT) and Site Acceptance Testing (SAT), ensuring systems are hardened before
they go live. Beyond technical specifications, the author emphasizes a
holistic strategy encompassing people and processes, such as developing
OT-specific security policies and conducting regular incident-response drills.
Resilience is also highlighted through the implementation of immutable backups
and "safe-state" logic to maintain production during disruptions. Ultimately,
establishing an OT governance board ensures that security remains a
continuous, executive-level priority, safeguarding automation investments
while maintaining the speed and efficiency essential for modern industrial
competitiveness.





























