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“The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.” -- Steve Jobs
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AI Coding: Do Security Risks Outweigh Productivity Gains?
AI coding tools are transforming software development, with widespread adoption
driven by the promise of automating repetitive tasks and boosting productivity.
Most developers report saving time and delivering features faster, making these
tools highly attractive. However, beneath these clear benefits lie significant
security risks and hidden costs that require careful consideration. While AI
models write code quickly, they often train on outdated or insecure libraries.
Consequently, developers frequently encounter code that looks functional but
introduces critical vulnerabilities or relies on hallucinated software packages.
A major concern is the alarming increase in leaked secrets and hardcoded
credentials, which require time-intensive cleanup efforts that drain engineering
resources. Security teams report spending up to forty percent of their time
simply sorting through false positives generated by AI-assisted code. The
financial aspect is equally complex. The base subscription costs for these tools
are rising, and when combined with the added expenses of security scanning,
triage, and infrastructure, the overall investment can be substantial. Whether
these tools provide a positive return depends heavily on the industry.
Fast-paced consumer applications might justify the expense through sheer
agility, whereas slower-moving sectors may struggle. Ultimately, adopting AI
coding requires strict security hygiene and realistic expectations about its
true cost to your organization.Building Customer Identity at Scale: Lessons from 1 Billion Users
Building a customer identity and access management (CIAM) system at scale goes far beyond basic login functionality. It sits at the intersection of user experience, security, and scalability. Based on insights from managing over a billion users, one of the most effective strategies is replacing traditional, lengthy registration forms with progressive profiling and contextual authentication. Instead of forcing users to provide all their personal details upfront—which often leads to high abandonment rates and fake data—companies should start with minimal requirements, such as an email and a passwordless login method. Additional details can then be requested gradually as they become contextually relevant, like asking for a shipping address only when a purchase is made. Simultaneously, contextual authentication analyzes behavioral signals—like location and device—to adapt security measures dynamically. Low-risk activities remain frictionless, while high-risk actions prompt multi-factor authentication. This approach reduces registration abandonment, drops support tickets, and surprisingly strengthens security by catching anomalies that standard passwords miss. When migrating millions of users to new identity systems, the biggest hurdle is psychological, not technical. Proactive, clear communication, dedicated support, and maintaining visual continuity are essential to retain user trust. By treating identity management as a relationship rather than just infrastructure, businesses can significantly improve conversion rates and customer satisfaction.Relearning cloud lessons from runaway AI token costs
Just like the early days of cloud computing, generative AI is causing unexpected
and massive spikes in technology spending for many organizations. AI token costs
are often running 10 to 20 times higher than initially projected, largely
because AI agents require roughly 50 times more computing power per task than
traditional chatbots. Because costs fluctuate based on usage, query complexity,
and model size, organizations are struggling to stick to their budgets. To bring
these costs under control, companies are returning to "FinOps" — the financial
operations strategies originally developed to manage cloud spending. The most
successful organizations apply a core set of practices: making spending visible,
attributing costs directly to the teams responsible (a method known as
"show-back"), and setting strict usage alerts. When teams see the direct
financial impact of their AI consumption, they naturally begin to optimize. This
means choosing smaller, more cost-effective models for simpler tasks rather than
defaulting to the most expensive, advanced options. Ultimately, organizations
that treat AI tokens as a managed operational expense rather than an
unpredictable variable are the ones successfully taming their generative AI
budgets.The Executive Cyber Risk Report: July 2026 Edition
The mid-2026 cyber risk landscape shows a clear shift, combining the risks of older, outdated software with new, AI-related threats. Recent events highlight this change. For instance, a flaw in an older Oracle system led to a major data breach, while companies like Novo Nordisk faced the theft of valuable AI research. Furthermore, an attack on a healthcare vendor exposed patient information, proving that a company's security is only as strong as its external partners. Beyond external attacks, new risks are growing inside organizations. Employees using unapproved AI tools can accidentally leak sensitive information. Additionally, criminals are using AI to create highly convincing phishing emails and trick AI coding assistants into running harmful commands. In response, regulations and insurance rules are tightening. New federal rules now require critical infrastructure companies to report major incidents within 72 hours. Cyber insurance providers are also demanding proof of clear AI safety rules and continuous security tracking before offering coverage. To protect their organizations, leaders must take calm, decisive action. This involves strictly evaluating the security of all external vendors. It also requires creating a clear, company-wide policy for safe AI use. Finally, organizations must adopt stronger, modern login protections to defend against increasingly clever phishing attempts.Enterprise AI is entering an evaluation gap: Agents are gaining autonomy faster than companies can verify them
Companies are rapidly granting artificial intelligence systems more
independence, yet their trust in the testing methods used to verify these
systems is actually dropping. This creates an evaluation gap where the freedom
given to AI outpaces the ability to ensure it works properly. A recent survey
reveals that half of surveyed businesses have released AI tools that passed
internal checks but later failed when interacting with customers. Despite
these setbacks, the majority of companies still plan to allow AI deployments
without human review within the next year. Testing these systems is inherently
difficult. Unlike standard software, AI systems choose their own steps and can
respond differently each time they run. They might complete several steps
correctly but make a critical error at the end. Consequently, business leaders
distrust automated testing because high scores often do not match real-world
performance. A single successful test does not guarantee consistent results,
making reliability a crucial metric that needs strict evaluation. To move
forward safely, organizations should adjust AI independence based on the risk
associated with a task. Low-risk tasks can operate with more freedom, while
sensitive actions require strict limits and human oversight. Ultimately, the
most successful companies will prioritize consistent testing and reliability
just as highly as deployment speed.Disaster Recovery Tabletop Exercise: A CIO's Step-by-Step Guide
A disaster recovery tabletop exercise is a guided discussion where key team members talk through a simulated emergency, such as a cloud outage or a ransomware attack. Unlike a live technical drill that requires taking systems offline, a tabletop exercise allows a company to test its recovery plans in a low-risk setting. Its primary goal is to find hidden gaps in communication, technical procedures, and decision-making before an actual crisis occurs. For technology leaders, these exercises are highly valuable. They help determine if a critical process relies too heavily on a single person or if the expected recovery timelines align with what the business actually needs. Furthermore, running these drills provides strong proof that the organization meets major security compliance standards. To get the most out of a session, organizations should set clear goals, choose a realistic threat, and introduce unexpected twists during the exercise to test how well the team adapts under pressure. Free resources, such as those provided by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), can provide a strong foundation for building these scenarios. Ultimately, tabletop exercises build the confidence and coordination required to handle real emergencies smoothly and effectively.The Five Stages Of Organizational Failure
When companies face major restructuring or layoffs, leaders often rush to
blame external factors like market shifts or artificial intelligence. However,
organizational failure rarely starts with outside forces; it typically follows
a predictable five-stage pattern. The first stage is denial, where leaders
ignore changing realities and stick to outdated plans. When denial breaks
down, the second stage, anger, sets in. This anger can result in rushed,
destructive decisions or be channeled into fixing the actual problem. The
third stage is blame, a dangerous trap where companies point fingers at
convenient excuses—like AI—instead of taking responsibility for their next
steps. To survive, organizations must reach the fourth stage, reflection. This
means conducting an honest, uncomfortable review of why things went wrong and
which assumptions failed. Finally, the company reaches acceptance, which is
not surrender, but rather a clear acknowledgment of the new reality and the
foundation for rebuilding. The true role of leadership is moving an
organization through these stages intentionally. Rather than waiting for
conditions to improve or hiding behind comfortable excuses, leaders must use
failure as valuable data, confront the damage directly, and focus on building
a sustainable path forward.When Criticality Outpaces the Plans: Why Business Continuity Must Redefine ‘Criticality’
For decades, businesses have used impact analysis to figure out which of their systems and assets are the most important. Traditionally, companies assumed that once they labeled a function as vital, it would stay that way until the next annual review. However, today's operating environments rely heavily on interconnected networks, supply chains, and external services, meaning risk changes quickly. An asset that seems minor during normal operations can suddenly cause a massive failure if a specific relationship or process breaks down. Because of this, organizations need to stop treating importance as a fixed label and start viewing it as a flexible state. The article introduces a framework based on adaptive importance, suggesting that leaders must evaluate how an asset's role might shift under stress. This involves looking at real-time changes, understanding how small parts can become major vulnerabilities, analyzing the exact position of an asset within a broader network, and recognizing that importance changes at different stages of a crisis. To stay secure, companies should update their priorities based on real-world shifts rather than a rigid calendar. Using artificial intelligence can help track these complex, hidden connections and spot changes early. Ultimately, true preparation means anticipating what might become essential tomorrow, rather than just protecting what seems important today.Trade-Offs in Multi-Region Architectures: Latency vs. Cost
Why the Next Technology Revolution Will Be Built on Invisible Infrastructure
While headlines focus on artificial intelligence and autonomous systems, the
next major technology shift will actually rely on something most people never
see: digital infrastructure. Every major leap in technology, from the internet
to cloud computing, has depended on a solid foundation. Today, the success of
modern applications requires complex, underlying systems like enterprise
architecture, secure data platforms, application programming interfaces, and
embedded cybersecurity. These elements form the invisible infrastructure that
allows digital innovation to happen smoothly and securely. Artificial
intelligence, for example, cannot function well without clean, governed data
and fast computing networks. Similarly, modern cloud platforms have moved
beyond tools for saving money to become the operational engines that drive
rapid development and disaster recovery. Even cybersecurity is shifting from a
basic protective wall to an integrated feature that supports safe innovation
across every level of a business. Rather than treating these technical systems
as basic support functions, smart organizations now view them as critical
business assets. Customers may not notice the complex integration of banking
platforms or supply chain networks, but they directly experience the results:
faster services, secure transactions, and reliable applications. Ultimately,
the companies that invest heavily in this unseen foundation today will be the
ones equipped to lead the digital economy tomorrow.




























