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Identity security risks are skyrocketing, and enterprises can’t keep up
According to recent studies from Sophos and Palo Alto Networks, identity
security has become the primary attack surface in modern cybersecurity,
leaving many enterprises struggling to keep pace. Research indicates that 71%
of organizations suffered at least one identity-related breach in 2025, with
victims experiencing an average of three separate incidents. These breaches
often result in devastating consequences, including data theft, ransomware,
and financial loss, with the mean recovery cost for ransomware attacks
reaching a staggering $1.64 million. A major driver of this escalating risk is
the explosion of non-human identities, as machine and AI agents now outnumber
human users by a hundred-to-one ratio. Despite the mounting threats,
enterprises face significant visibility challenges; only a quarter of
organizations continuously monitor for unusual login attempts, and many
struggle with fragmented security tools that create dangerous blind spots.
Furthermore, businesses finding compliance difficult are disproportionately
targeted, suffering breaches at higher rates. To address these
vulnerabilities, experts emphasize that security leaders must move beyond
manual processes and embrace end-to-end automation combined with unified
governance. Failing to secure these rapidly proliferating AI-driven identities
could lead to increasingly costly gaps that traditional security controls are
simply unequipped to close, making robust identity management more critical
than ever.The Dashboard Delusion: Why Data-Rich Organizations Still Struggle to Make Decisions
The Critical Cyber Skills Every Security Team Still Needs
In the Forbes Technology Council article, industry experts outline essential
cybersecurity skills that organizations must preserve as technological roles
evolve and specialize. A primary focus is bridging the gap between technical
discovery and business objectives. Security professionals must excel at
translating complex risks into tangible business impacts, such as revenue
protection and regulatory compliance, to ensure stakeholders prioritize
necessary investments. Furthermore, the council emphasizes the importance of
maintaining foundational technical knowledge, specifically core networking
fundamentals and system-specific institutional insights. As automated tools
increasingly abstract daily tasks, teams must still understand underlying
protocols and data locations to manage incidents when dashboards fail. Beyond
technical prowess, a human-centered approach remains vital; practitioners
should view security through the lens of non-technical employees to mitigate
human error and foster a culture of collective responsibility. The
contributors also highlight the need for “security invariants”—clear,
plain-language rules defining what a system must never allow—and a culture of
healthy skepticism that consistently questions aging configurations. By
integrating these soft skills with deep architectural understanding, security
teams can move beyond mere tool-based detection to achieve holistic
remediation and resilience. This strategic blend of business acumen,
fundamental expertise, and human psychology ensures that cybersecurity remains
an agile, business-aligned function rather than a siloed technical burden.Building bankable, resilient data centers: From site to operation
The article "Building Bankable, Resilient Data Centers: From Site to Operation" emphasizes that achieving long-term project viability in the digital infrastructure sector requires a comprehensive, lifecycle-focused approach to risk management. The journey toward creating a facility that is both "bankable" and "resilient" begins with strategic site selection, which dictates the project's trajectory regarding power accessibility, regulatory hurdles, and physical exposure to natural catastrophes. Early risk engineering and stakeholder alignment are critical for securing the massive capital required for modern data centers, especially as asset values skyrocket. Several significant constraints currently challenge the industry, including extreme power dependency driven by the AI boom, unprecedented speed-to-market demands, and severe supply chain bottlenecks for critical infrastructure like transformers and generators. Furthermore, the concentrated value of these mega-scale campuses often exceeds traditional insurance limits, necessitating more sophisticated risk modeling and innovative coverage structures. These specialized programs must effectively bridge the dangerous "gray zones" that often emerge during the complex transition from phased construction to full-scale operations. Ultimately, by integrating meticulous risk planning from the initial feasibility stage through to daily operations, developers can successfully navigate sustainability mandates and persistent grid constraints. This proactive alignment ensures that data centers remain not only insurable but also capable of delivering the continuous uptime required by the global digital economy.Outage Report: AI Boom Threatens Years of Data Center Resiliency Gains
The "2026 Data Center Outage Analysis" from Uptime Institute highlights a
critical juncture for industry resiliency, noting that while general outage
rates have declined for five consecutive years, the rapid proliferation of
artificial intelligence (AI) threatens to reverse these gains. Currently,
power-related failures involving UPS systems and generators remain the primary
cause of downtime, with one in five incidents now exceeding $1 million in
costs. However, the report warns that AI-specific facilities introduce
unprecedented risks due to their massive scale and extreme energy intensity.
These high-density workloads create "spiky" power demands that can strain
regional grids and damage on-site infrastructure. To meet these demands,
operators are increasingly turning to behind-the-meter power solutions, such
as gas turbines and large-scale battery arrays, which bring a new class of
operational complexities. Additionally, the adoption of nascent technologies
like liquid cooling and higher-voltage distribution introduces further
variables into the reliability equation. As AI training sites prioritize scale
over traditional redundancy to manage costs, the systemic likelihood of
failure appears to be increasing. Ultimately, the industry must navigate these
evolving pressure points—balancing the relentless demand for AI capacity with
the foundational need for stable, resilient infrastructure—to prevent a
significant resurgence in severe and costly service disruptions.Why resilience matters as much as innovation in NBFCs
Using continuous purple teaming to protect fast-paced enterprise environments
Modern enterprise environments are evolving rapidly through cloud adoption and
automated delivery pipelines, rendering traditional periodic security testing
insufficient. To bridge this gap, continuous purple teaming has emerged as a
vital strategy that integrates offensive and defensive operations into a
unified, ongoing workflow. By leveraging real-time threat intelligence mapped
to the MITRE ATT&CK framework, organizations can shift from generic
simulations to validating their defenses against the specific adversaries they
face today. This model operationalizes security validation by employing both
atomic testing for individual techniques and chain-based simulations for full
attack paths, ensuring that detection and response capabilities are robust
across the entire kill chain. Central to this approach is the use of automated
infrastructure and dedicated cyber ranges that mirror production environments,
allowing teams to safely refine logging strategies and response playbooks
without disrupting operations. Furthermore, continuous purple teaming prepares
enterprises for the next generation of AI-enabled threats by facilitating
controlled experimentation with emerging attack vectors. Ultimately, this
collaborative methodology fosters a culture of shared knowledge between red
and blue teams, transforming security from a series of isolated assessments
into a dynamic, measurable component of daily operations that maintains
resilience in a constantly shifting digital landscape.Water and Cybersecurity: Digital Threats to Our Most Critical Resource
AI Drives Cybersecurity Investments, Widening 'Valley of Death'
The cybersecurity industry is currently undergoing a radical transformation
driven by a massive influx of capital into artificial intelligence, according
to recent insights from Dark Reading. In the first quarter of 2026, financing
volume for AI-native startups reached $3.8 billion, notably surpassing M&A
activity for only the fourth time in history. While this investment surge
signals robust industry growth and job creation, it has simultaneously widened
the "valley of death" for traditional security firms struggling to pivot. This
perilous phase, where companies have exhausted initial funding but lack
sustainable revenue, is becoming more difficult to navigate as investors
prioritize cutting-edge AI technologies over legacy solutions. Experts note
that advanced frontier models, such as Anthropic’s Mythos, are disrupting
established sectors like vulnerability management, rendering some existing
vendors virtually obsolete. This technological shift is accelerating a
"Darwinian" consolidation wave, where an overcrowded market of overlapping
players will eventually be winnowed down. As major acquisitions become the
primary exit strategy for successful AI startups, the average enterprise will
likely consolidate its security stack from dozens of disparate tools to a few
integrated, AI-driven platforms. Ultimately, while AI acts as "gasoline on a
bonfire" for innovation, it demands that organizations rapidly adapt or face
irrelevance in an increasingly AI-centric landscape.























