Quote for the day:
“Conceptual integrity is the most important consideration in system design.” -- Frederick P. Brooks Jr.
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6 Key Requirements for Securing AI Agents Before the POC
Before running an AI proof of concept, organizations must treat AI agents like
critical machinery by implementing safety controls before deployment. Industry
experts recommend six practical requirements for securing these systems.
First, give AI agents their own distinct identities rather than letting them
assume the identity of a human user. Second, separate permissions for data
sources, people, and agents, ensuring agents only access what is absolutely
necessary. Third, establish strong data management by tracking data quality,
checking for biases, and protecting privacy so the systems understand the
context of the information they process. Fourth, protect passwords and
credentials by keeping them out of the foundational code and only providing
them when the system is actually running, ensuring agents never have direct
access to raw secrets. Fifth, establish clear rules for which software parts
automated coding tools are allowed to use, preventing the introduction of
outdated or weak components into your systems. Finally, plan for unexpected
behavior by setting up thorough monitoring, including decision records and
action tracking, to understand exactly what the agents are doing in real time.
These steps provide a secure foundation for safe operations.Applying DAMA-DMBOK to Humanitarian Data Initiatives
The article written by Stanyslas Matayo outlines a practical approach for applying data management principles from the DAMA-DMBOK framework to humanitarian organizations. These agencies frequently struggle to maintain data continuity due to high staff turnover, limited funding, and fragmented operations across headquarters, regional branches, and country offices. To resolve this, the author advocates for a hybrid operating model where headquarters establishes foundational standards while local offices maintain operational accountability. Crucially, the strategy shifts data ownership away from technical specialists, placing data governance responsibilities onto cross-functional sector leaders and program heads instead. The framework introduces a lightweight structure, including a sustainability checklist and a duplication-checking classification system, which can be implemented without creating new headcount or restructuring departments. This model also blends innovation directly into the standard data lifecycle, ensuring that local data prototypes have a clear path toward broader organizational adoption. Ultimately, by treating data as a shared organizational asset and publishing clear business glossaries and catalogs, humanitarian entities can realistically advance their data maturity, ensuring that vital situational and beneficiary information survives personnel rotations and continues to inform field decisions reliably.Anatomy of a retail ransomware attack: Tabletop simulates modern mayhem methods
At the Infosecurity Europe conference, cybersecurity firm Semperis hosted an
interactive simulation lasting two hours to test how organizations handle
modern digital threats. The exercise centered on a fictional supermarket chain
equipped with an artificial intelligence system managing its supply chain.
Participants were split into attacking and defending teams, taking ten minute
turns to outmaneuver one another. The attackers, playing a state sponsored
group, aimed to cause severe operational chaos and damage the company
reputation rather than simply secure a financial payout. They exploited an
external logistics partner to breach the internal network, stole loyalty card
records, and disrupted heating, ventilation, and payroll systems. To overwhelm
the defenders, the attackers flooded security monitors with false alarms,
placed bizarre delivery orders, and released a fabricated video of the chief
executive officer to provoke public anger online. Conversely, the defending
team refused to pay the ransom demands. They quickly established independent
communication channels to bypass internal confusion and relied on a decoy
network to trap the intruders away from genuine customer data. Ultimately, the
simulation demonstrated that successfully surviving a major digital crisis
depends much more on adaptable human decisions, clear communication, and solid
teamwork than on software alone.
Real-Time Isn’t a Feature. It’s a Requirement in Modern Energy Systems
Modern energy grids demand instant data processing, shifting real-time
operations from a luxury to an absolute necessity. Traditional systems and
cloud-based analytics, while useful for long-term planning, introduce too much
latency for the split-second decisions required by today's distributed energy
resources, battery storage systems, and renewable generation. Relying on cloud
architecture to handle high-frequency telemetry from these assets causes
crippling delays and creates unnecessary bandwidth costs. Instead, processing
must occur at the edge, close to the equipment. Edge computing eliminates
latency by analyzing vast amounts of data locally and forwarding only critical
changes to centralized servers. However, deploying effective edge solutions is
primarily a software challenge rather than a hardware one. Edge platforms must
seamlessly ingest, normalize, and timestamp data across a wide range of
protocols from various manufacturers. Open, standards-based architectures are
essential to ensure interoperability and protect utilities from vendor lock-in
as their operations expand. Ultimately, transitioning to real-time edge
processing forms the foundation for advanced analytics, autonomous
coordination, and market participation. Utilities that adapt their
infrastructure to support these decentralized systems will thrive, while those
relying strictly on centralized data platforms risk falling permanently
behind.How Boards Should Think About AI Vendor Risk
When bringing artificial intelligence into a company, corporate boards must
treat vendor risk as a fundamental business exposure rather than a routine
software purchase or an IT checklist. Because these tools evolve, learn from
sensitive inputs, and can behave unpredictably over time, legacy procurement
methods are no longer enough. Instead of getting bogged down in technical
weeds or polished vendor presentations, directors should focus their oversight
on three straightforward questions: What specific company data goes into the
tool? Which operational decisions does the output influence? Who holds named
accountability if something goes wrong? High-stakes functions like pricing,
customer service, or hiring demand far stricter limits than simple drafting
tasks. To govern effectively, boards must look past vague policy drafts and
demand brief, plain-English summaries that highlight real vulnerabilities,
such as data leakage, intellectual property ownership, and whether the company
can cleanly exit a contract without disruption. Rather than sitting through
endless status updates, directors should ensure every review drives a concrete
choice to accept, fund, fix, limit, or drop the tool. Ultimately, managing
outside technology requires clear boundaries and steady oversight before
unmanaged tools spread too deeply across the business.How to Lead Through Uncertainty with Strategic Resilience
Malware Has Gotten Smarter. Here's How Your Antivirus Has, Too
Antivirus software is undergoing a necessary shift to keep pace with modern
digital threats. In the past, security programs functioned much like a bouncer
checking faces against a list of known troublemakers; they relied almost
entirely on databases of recognized code signatures to catch dangerous files.
However, malicious code now changes far too rapidly for manual cataloging to
keep up. Attackers routinely design software that automatically rewrites
itself with every new infection, making it impossible to spot by identity
alone. To solve this problem, modern security systems have moved away from
simple recognition and now focus on active observation. Using machine learning
and steady monitoring, these tools watch how a program actually behaves once
it enters a computer. Instead of asking whether a file looks familiar, the
software asks whether it is acting strangely. For example, it watches for
programs that suddenly try to lock down dozens of personal files or make quiet
network connections in the middle of the night. By looking for abnormal
patterns rather than specific names, modern antivirus software can identify
and stop brand-new attacks before they have a chance to cause any actual harm.
Why building ‘stress intelligence’ is essential for decision-making in an age of constant crisis
Today’s business and political leaders operate in an environment of constant,
overlapping emergencies, leaving them with almost no time to recover before
the next problem hits. Recent surveys show that more than half of top
executives feel severely stressed, and most expect these pressures to keep
growing. While a moderate amount of tension can sharpen focus and boost
performance, chronic exhaustion does the exact opposite. Neuroscience confirms
that prolonged, intense pressure damages working memory, narrows attention,
reduces creativity, and distorts how people evaluate risk. Consequently,
leaders often make poor choices based on incomplete information right when the
stakes are highest. To counter this dangerous cycle, individuals must develop
what experts call stress intelligence. Far beyond basic wellness perks or
simple breathing apps, this is a practical skill centered on recognizing how
tension impairs human judgment in real time. It requires executives to
understand their personal reaction patterns under pressure, whether they
freeze up or act too impulsively, and put safeguards in place to protect their
thinking. By learning to respect these biological limits, management teams can
maintain their composure, evaluate consequences clearly, and make consistently
wiser decisions during critical global moments.
The conversation around unsanctioned artificial intelligence at work is
fundamentally changing. Originally, security teams focused on preventing
employees from accidentally pasting sensitive company data into public
chatbots. Today, however, the real danger is far more structural: it has
become a challenge of internal access control. Across organizations, teams are
quietly building their own automated AI assistants and connecting them
directly to vital systems like sales databases, shared documents, and code
repositories. Unlike standard software, these new AI agents act independently,
meaning they can use stored credentials to read, update, or even delete
production files without human oversight. To make these tools work smoothly,
staff frequently grant them broad permissions that go unmonitored. This
creates an enormous blind spot where automated accounts retain elevated access
long after the employee who set them up moves to another project or leaves the
company entirely. Traditional security measures and simple website blocks fail
here because they rely on predictable human behavior. To safely manage this
shift, companies must stop viewing AI solely as a data leak to plug and start
treating these automated helpers as distinct users that require continuous
tracking, clear ownership, and strictly limited digital keys.


























