Daily Tech Digest - December 07, 2025


Quote for the day:

"Definiteness of purpose is the starting point of all achievement." -- W. Clement Stone



Balancing AI innovation and cost: The new FinOps mandate

Yet as AI moves from pilot to production, an uncomfortable truth is emerging: AI is expensive. Not because of reckless spending, but because the economics of AI are unlike anything technology leaders have managed before. Most CIOs and CTOs underestimate the financial complexity of scaling AI. Models that double in size can consume ten times the compute. Exponential should be your watchword. Inference workloads run continuously, consuming GPU cycles long after training ends, which creates a higher ongoing cost compared to traditional IT projects. ... The irony is that even as AI drives operational efficiency, its own operating costs are becoming one of the biggest drags on IT budgets. IDC’s research shows that, without tighter alignment between line of business, finance, and platform engineering, enterprises risk turning AI from an innovation catalyst into a financial liability. ... AI workloads cut across infrastructure, application development, data governance, and business operations. Many AI workloads will run in a hybrid environment, meaning cost impacts for on-premises as well as cloud and SaaS are expected. Managing this multicloud and hybrid landscape demands a unified operating model that connects technical telemetry with financial insight. The new FinOps leader will need fluency in both IT engineering and economics — a rare but rapidly growing skill set that will define next-generation IT leadership.


Local clouds shape Europe’s AI future

The new “sovereign” offerings from US-based cloud providers like Microsoft, AWS, and Google represent a significant step forward. They are building cloud regions within the EU, promising that customer data will remain local, be overseen by European citizens, and comply with EU laws. They’ve hired local staff, established European governance, and crafted agreements to meet strict EU regulations. The goal is to reassure customers and satisfy regulators. For European organizations facing tough questions, these steps often feel inadequate. Regardless of how localized the infrastructure is, most global cloud giants still have their headquarters in the United States, subject to US law and potential political pressure. There is always a lingering, albeit theoretical, risk that the US government might assert legal or administrative rights over data stored in Europe. ... As more European organizations pursue digital transformation and AI-driven growth, the evidence is mounting: The new sovereign cloud solutions launched by the global tech giants aren’t winning over the market’s most sensitive or risk-averse customers. Those who require freedom from foreign jurisdiction and total assurance that their data is shielded from all external interference are voting with their budgets for the homegrown players. ... In the months and years ahead, I predict that Europe’s own clouds—backed by strong local partnerships and deep familiarity with regulatory nuance—will serve as the true engine for the region’s AI ambitions.


When Innovation and Risks Collide: Hexnode and Asia’s Cybersecurity Paradox

“If you look at the way most cyberattacks happen today—take ransomware, for example—they often begin with one compromised account. From there, attackers try to move laterally across the network, hunting for high-value data or systems. By segmenting the network and requiring re-authentication at each step, ZT essentially blocks that free movement. It’s a “verify first, then grant access” philosophy, and it dramatically reduces the attacker’s options,” Pavithran explained. Unfortunately, way too many organisations still view Zero Trust as a tool rather than a strategic framework. Others believe it requires ripping out existing infrastructure. In reality, however, Zero Trust can be implemented incrementally and is both adaptable and scalable. It integrates technologies such as multifactor authentication, microsegmentation, and identity and access management into a cohesive architecture. Crucially, Zero Trust is not a one-off project. It is a continuous process of monitoring, verification, and fine-tuning. As threats evolve, so too must policies and controls. “Zero Trust isn’t a box you check and move on from,” Pavithran emphasised. “It’s a continuous, evolving process. Threats evolve, technologies evolve, and so do business needs. That means policies and controls need to be constantly reviewed and fine-tuned. It’s about continuous monitoring and ongoing vigilance—making sure that every access request, every single time, is both appropriate and secure.”


CIOs take note: talent will walk without real training and leadership

“Attracting and retaining talent is a problem, so things are outsourced,” says the CIO of a small healthcare company with an IT team of three. “You offload the responsibility and free up internal resources at the risk of losing know-how in the company. But at the moment, we have no other choice. We can’t offer the salaries of a large private group, and IT talent changes jobs every two years, so keeping people motivated is difficult. We hire a candidate, go through the training, and see them grow only to see them leave. But our sector is highly specialized and the necessary skills are rare.” ... CIOs also recognize the importance of following people closely, empowering them, and giving them a precise and relevant role that enhances motivation. It’s also essential to collaborate with the HR function to develop tools for welfare and well-being. According to the Gi Group study, the factors that IT candidates in Italy consider a priority when choosing an employer are, in descending order, salary, a hybrid job offer, work-life balance, the possibility of covering roles that don’t involve high stress levels, and opportunities for career advancement and professional growth. But there’s another aspect that helps solve the age-old issue of talent management. CIOs need to recognize more of the role of their leadership. At the moment, Italian IT directors place it at the bottom of their key qualities. 


Rethinking the CIO-CISO Dynamic in the Age of AI

Today's CIOs are perpetual jugglers, balancing budgets and helping spur technology innovation at speed while making sure IT goals are aligned with business priorities, especially when it comes to navigating mandates from boards and senior leaders to streamline and drive efficiency through the latest AI solutions. ... "The most common concern with having the CISO report into legal is that legal is not technically inclined," she said. "This is actually a positive as cybersecurity has become more of a business-enabling function over a technological one. It also requires the CISO to translate tech-speak into language that is understandable by non-tech leaders in the organization and incorporate business and strategic drivers." As organizations undergo digital transformation and incorporate AI into their tech stacks, more are creating alternate C-suite roles such as "Chief Digital Officer" and "Chief AI Officer."  ... When it comes to AI systems, the CISO's organization may be better positioned to lead enterprise-wide transformation, Sacolick said. AI systems are nondeterministic - they can produce different outputs and follow different computational paths even when given the exact same input - and this type of technology may be better suited for CISOs. CIOs have operated in the world of deterministic IT systems, where code, infrastructure systems, testing frameworks and automation provide predictable and consistent outputs, while CISOs are immersed in a world of ever-changing, unpredictable threats.


The AI reckoning: How boards can evolve

AI-savvy boards will be able to help their companies navigate these risks and opportunities. According to a 2025 MIT study, organizations with digitally and AI-savvy boards outperform their peers by 10.9 percentage points in return on equity, while those without are 3.8 percent below their industry average.5 What boards should do, however, is the bigger question—and the focus of this article. The intensity of the board’s role will depend on the extent to which AI is likely to affect the business and its competitive dynamics and the resulting risks and opportunities. Those competitive dynamics should shape the company’s AI posture and the board’s governance stance. ... What matters is that the board aligns on the business’s aspirational strategy using a clear view of the opportunities and risks so that it can tailor the governance approach. As the business gains greater experience with AI, the board can modify its posture. ... Directors should focus on determining whether management has the entrepreneurial experience, technological know-how, and transformational leadership experience to run an AI-driven business. The board’s role is particularly important in scrutinizing the sustainability of these ventures—including required skills, implications on the traditional business, and energy consumption—while having a clear view of the range of risks to address, such as data privacy, cybersecurity, the global regulatory environment, and intellectual property (IP).


Do Tariffs Solicit Cyber Attention? Escalating Risk in a Fractured Supply Chain

Offensive cyber operations are a fourth possibility largely serving to achieve the tactical and strategic objectives of decisionmakers, or in the case of tariff imposition, retaliation. Depending on its goals, a government may use the cyber domain to steal sensitive information such as amount and duration of a potential tariff or try to ascertain the short- and long-term intent of the tariff-imposing government. A second option may be a more aggressive response, executing disruptive operations to signal its dissatisfaction over tariff rates. ... It’s tempting to think of tariffs as purely a policy lever, and a way to increase revenue or ratchet up pressure on foreign governments. But in today’s interconnected world, trade policy and cybersecurity policy are deeply intertwined. When they aren’t aligned, companies risk becoming collateral damage in the larger geopolitical space, where hostile actors jockey to not only steal data for profit, but also look to steal secrets, compromise infrastructure, and undermine trust. This offers adversaries new ways to facilitate cyber intrusion to accomplish all of these objectives, requiring organizations to up their efforts in countering these threats via a variety of established practices. These include rigorous third-party vetting; continuous monitoring of third-party access through updates, remote connections, and network interfaces; implementing zero trust architecture; and designing incident response playbooks specifically around supply-chain breaches, counterfeit-hardware incidents, and firmware-level intrusions.


Resilience: How Leaders Build Organizations That Bend, Not Break

Resilient leaders don’t aim to restore what was; they reinvent what’s next. Leadership today is less about stability and more about elasticity—the ability to stretch, adapt, and rebound without breaking. ... Resilient cultures don’t eliminate risk—they absorb it. Leaders who privilege learning over blame and transparency over perfection create teams that can think clearly under pressure. In my companies, we’ve operationalized this with short, ritualized cadences—weekly priorities, daily huddles, and tight AARs that focus on behavior, not ego. The goal is never to defend a plan; it’s to upgrade it. ... “Resilience is mostly about adaptation rather than risk mitigation.” The distinction matters. Risk mitigation reduces downside. Adaptation converts disruption into forward motion. The organizations that redefine their categories after shocks aren’t the ones that avoid volatility; they’re the ones that metabolize it. ... In uncertainty, people don’t expect perfection—they expect presence. Transparent leadership doesn’t eliminate volatility, but it changes how teams experience it. Silence erodes trust faster than any market correction; people fill gaps with assumptions that are worse than reality. ... Treat resilience as design, not reaction. Build cultures that absorb shock, operating systems that learn fast, and communication habits that anchor trust. In an era where strategy half-life keeps shrinking, these are the leaders—and organizations—that won’t just survive volatility. 


AI-Powered Quality Engineering: How Generative Models Are Rewriting Test Strategies

Despite significant investments in automation, many organizations still struggle with the same bottlenecks. Test suites often collapse due to minor UI changes. Maintenance cycles grow longer each quarter. Even mature teams rarely achieve effective coverage that truly exceeds 70-80%. Regression cycles stretch for days or weeks, slowing down release velocity and diluting confidence across engineering teams. It isn’t just productivity that suffers; it’s trust. These problems reduce teams’ confidence in releasing immediately and diminish automation ROI in addition to slowing down delivery. Traditional test automation has reached its limits because it automates execution, not understanding. And this is exactly where Generative AI changes the conversation. ... Synthetic data that mirrors production variability can be produced without waiting for dependent systems. Scripts no longer break every time a button shifts. As AI self-heal selectors and locators without human assistance, tests start to regenerate themselves. While predictive signals identify defects early through examining past data and patterns, natural-language inputs streamline test descriptions. ... GenAI isn’t magic, though. When generative models are fed ambiguous input, they can produce brittle or incorrect test cases. Ing­esting production logs without adequate anonymization introduces privacy and compliance risks. Risks to data privacy and compliance must be considered while using production traces. 


The Great Cloud Exodus: Why European Companies Are Massively Returning to Their Own Infrastructure

Many European managers and policymakers live under the assumption that when they choose "Region Western Europe" (often physically located in datacenters around Amsterdam or Eemshaven), their data is safely shielded from American interference. "The data is in our country, isn't it?" is the oft-heard defense. This is, legally speaking, a dangerous illusion. American legislation doesn't look at the ground on which the server stands, but at who holds the keys to the front door. ... The legal criterion is not the location of the server, but the control ("possession, custody, or control") that the American parent company has over the data. Since Microsoft Corporation in Redmond, Washington, has full control over subsidiary Microsoft Netherlands BV, data in the datacenter in the Wieringermeer legally falls under the direct scope of an American subpoena. ... Additionally, Microsoft applies "consistent global pricing," meaning European customers often see additional increases to align Euro prices with the strong US dollar. This makes budgeting a nightmare of foreign exchange risks. AWS shows a similar pattern. The complexity of the AWS bill is now notorious; an entire industry of "FinOps" consultants has emerged to help companies understand their invoice. ... or organizations seeking ultimate control and data sovereignty, purchasing own hardware and placing it in a Dutch datacenter is the best option. This approach combines the advantages of on-premise with the infrastructure of a professional datacenter.

Daily Tech Digest - December 06, 2025


Quote for the day:

"The distance between insanity and genius is measured only by success." -- Bruce Feirstein



AI denial is becoming an enterprise risk: Why dismissing “slop” obscures real capability gains

After all, by any objective measure AI is wildly more capable than the vast majority of computer scientists predicted only five years ago and it is still improving at a surprising pace. The impressive leap demonstrated by Gemini 3 is only the latest example. At the same time, McKinsey recently reported that 20% of organizations already derive tangible value from genAI. ... So why is the public buying into the narrative that AI is faltering, that the output is “slop,” and that the AI boom lacks authentic use cases? Personally, I believe it’s because we’ve fallen into a collective state of AI denial, latching onto the narratives we want to hear in the face of strong evidence to the contrary. Denial is the first stage of grief and thus a reasonable reaction to the very disturbing prospect that we humans may soon lose cognitive supremacy here on planet earth. In other words, the overblown AI bubble narrative is a societal defense mechanism. ... It’s likely that AI will soon be able to read our emotions faster and more accurately than any human, tracking subtle cues in our micro-expressions, vocal patterns, posture, gaze and even breathing. And as we integrate AI assistants into our phones, glasses and other wearable devices, these systems will monitor our emotional reactions throughout our day, building predictive models of our behaviors. Without strict regulation, which is increasingly unlikely, these predictive models could be used to target us with individually optimized influence that maximizes persuasion.


A smarter way for large language models to think about hard problems

“The computational cost of inference has quickly become a major bottleneck for frontier model providers, and they are actively trying to find ways to improve computational efficiency per user queries. For instance, the recent GPT-5.1 release highlights the efficacy of the ‘adaptive reasoning’ approach our paper proposes. By endowing the models with the ability to know what they don’t know, we can enable them to spend more compute on the hardest problems and most promising solution paths, and use far fewer tokens on easy ones. That makes reasoning both more reliable and far more efficient,” says Navid Azizan, the Alfred H. and Jean M. Hayes ... Typical inference-time scaling approaches assign a fixed amount of computation for the LLM to break the problem down and reason about the steps. Instead, the researchers’ method, known as instance-adaptive scaling, dynamically adjusts the number of potential solutions or reasoning steps based on how likely they are to succeed, as the model wrestles with the problem. “This is how humans solve problems. We come up with some partial solutions and then decide, should I go further with any of these, or stop and revise, or even go back to my previous step and continue solving the problem from there?” Wang explains. ... “The beauty of our approach is that this adaptation happens on the fly, as the problem is being solved, rather than happening all at once at the beginning of the process,” says Greenewald.


Extending Server Lifespan: Cost-Saving Strategies for Data Centers

Predicting server lifespan is complicated, as servers don’t typically wear out at a consistent rate. In fact, many of the components inside servers, like CPUs, don’t really wear out at all, so long as they’re not subject to unusual conditions, like excess heat. But certain server parts, such as hard disks, will eventually fail because they contain mechanical components that wear down over time. ... A challenge is that cooler server rooms often lead to higher data center energy costs, and possibly greater water usage, due to the increased load on cooling systems. But if you invest in cooling optimization measures, it may be possible to keep your server room cool without compromising on sustainability goals. ... Excess or highly fluctuating electrical currents can fry server components. Insufficient currents may also cause problems, as can frequent power outages. Thus, making smart investments in power management technologies for data centers is an important step toward keeping servers running longer. The more stable and reliable your power system, the longer you can expect your servers to last. ... The greater the percentage of available CPU and memory a server uses on a regular basis, the more likely it is to wear out due to the increased load placed on system components. That’s why it’s important to avoid placing workloads on servers that continuously max out their resource consumption. 


Sleepless in Security: What’s Actually Keeping CISOs Up at Night

While mastering the fundamentals keeps your organization secure day to day, CISOs face another, more existential challenge. The interconnected nature of the modern software ecosystem — built atop stacks of open-source components and complex layers of interdependent libraries — is always a drumbeat risk in the background. It’s a threat that often flies under the radar until it’s too late. ... While CISOs can’t rewrite the entire software ecosystem, what they can do is bring the same discipline to third-party and open-source risk management that they apply to internal controls. That starts with visibility, especially when it comes to third-party libraries and packages. By maintaining an accurate and continuously updated inventory of all components and their dependencies, CISOs can enforce patching and vulnerability management processes that enable them to respond quickly to bugs, breaches, vulnerabilities, and other potential challenges. ... The cybersecurity landscape is relentless—and the current rate of change is unlikely to shift anytime soon. While splashy headlines soak up a lot of the attention, the things keeping CISOs awake at night usually look a little different. The fundamentals we often take for granted and the fragile systems our enterprises depend on aren’t always as secure as they seem, and accounting for that risk is critical. From basic hygiene like user lifecycle management and MFA coverage to the sprawling, interdependent web of open-source software, the threats are systemic and constantly evolving.


Agents-as-a-service are poised to rewire the software industry and corporate structures

AI agents are set to change the dynamic between enterprises and software vendors in other ways, too. One major difference between software and agents is software is well-defined, operates in a particular way, and changes slowly, says Jinsook Han, chief of strategy, corporate development, and global agentic AI at Genpact. “But we expect when the agent comes in, it’s going to get smarter every day,” she says. “The world will change dramatically because agents are continuously changing. And the expectations from the enterprises are also being reshaped.” ... Another aspect of the agentic economy is instead of a human employee talking to a vendor’s AI agent, a company agent can handle the conversation on the employee’s behalf. And if a company wants to switch vendors, the experience will be seamless for employees, since they never had to deal directly with the vendor anyway. “I think that’s something that’ll happen,” says Ricardo Baeza-Yates, co-chair of the US technology policy committee at the Association for Computing Machinery. “And it makes the market more competitive, and makes integrating things much easier.” In the short term, however, it might make more sense for companies to use the vendors’ agents instead of creating their own. ... That doesn’t mean SaaS will die overnight. Companies have made significant investments in their current technology infrastructure, says Patrycja Sobera, SVP of digital workplace solutions at Unisys.


Beyond the Buzzword: The Only Question that Matters for AI in Network Operations

The problem isn’t the lack of information; it’s the volume and pace at which information arrives from a dozen different monitoring tools that can’t communicate with each other. You know the pattern: the tool sprawl problem definitely exists. A problem occurs, and it’s no longer just an alarm—it’s a full-blown storm of noise out of which you can’t differentiate the source of the problem. Our ops teams are the real heroes who keep the lights on and spend way too much of their time correlating information across various screens. They are essentially trying to jump from network to log file to application trace as the clock ticks. ... In operations, reliability is everything. You cannot build a house on shifting sand, and you certainly can’t build a reliable operational strategy on noisy, inconsistent data. If critical context is missing, even the most sophisticated model will start to drift toward educated guesswork. It’s like commissioning an architect to design a skyscraper without telling them where the foundation will be or what soil they’ll be working with. ... The biggest shortcoming of traditional tools is the isolated visibility they provide: they perceive incidents as a series of isolated points. The operator receives three notifications: one regarding the routing problem (NetOps), one regarding high CPU on the server (ITOps), and one regarding application latency (CloudOps). The platform receives three symptoms.


Architecting efficient context-aware multi-agent framework for production

To build production-grade agents that are reliable, efficient, and debuggable, the industry is exploring a new discipline: Context engineering — treating context as a first-class system with its own architecture, lifecycle, and constraints. Based on our experience scaling complex single- or multi-agentic systems, we designed and evolved the context stack in Google Agent Development Kit (ADK) to support that discipline. ADK is an open-source, multi-agent-native framework built to make active context engineering achievable in real systems. ... Early agent implementations often fall into the "context dumping" trap: placing large payloads—a 5MB CSV, a massive JSON API response, or a full PDF transcript—directly into the chat history. This creates a permanent tax on the session; every subsequent turn drags that payload along, burying critical instructions and inflating costs. ADK solves this by treating large data as Artifacts: named, versioned binary or text objects managed by an ArtifactService. Conceptually, ADK applies a handle pattern to large data. Large data lives in the artifact store, not the prompt. By default, agents see only a lightweight reference (a name and summary) via the request processor. When—and only when—an agent requires the raw data to answer a question, it uses the LoadArtifactsTool. This action temporarily loads the content into the Working Context.


Can Europe Build Digital Sovereignty While Safeguarding Its Rights Legacy?

The biggest constraint to the EuroStack vision is not technical — it is energy. AI and digital infrastructure demand massive, continuous power, and Europe’s grid is not yet built for it. ... Infrastructure sovereignty is impossible without sovereign capital. Aside from the Schwarz Digits pledge, general financing plans remain insufficient, and the venture financing landscape is fragmented. While the 2026 EU budget allocates €1.0 billion to the Digital Europe Programme, this foundational funding is not sufficient for the scale of EuroStack. The EU needs a unified capital markets union and targeted instruments to fund capital-intensive projects—specifically open-source infrastructure, which was identified as a strategic necessity by the Sovereign Tech Agency. ... Sovereignty requires control over the digital stack’s core layers, a control proprietary software inherently denies. The EU must view open-source technologies not just as a cheaper alternative for public procurement, but as the only viable path to technical autonomy, transparency, and resilience. ... Finally, Europe must abandon the fortress mentality. Sovereignty does not mean isolation; it means strategic interdependence. Inward-looking narratives risk ignoring crucial alliances with emerging economies. Europe must actively position itself as the global bridge-builder, offering an alternative to the US-China binary by advocating for its standards and co-developing interoperable infrastructure with emerging economies. 


Avoiding the next technical debt: Building AI governance before it breaks

In fact, AI risks aren’t just about the future — they’re already part of daily operations. These risks arise when algorithms affect business results without clear accountability, when tools collect sensitive data and when automated systems make decisions that people no longer check. These governance gaps aren’t new. We saw the same issues with cloud, APIs, IoT and big data. The solution is also familiar: keep track, assess, control and monitor. ... Without the right guardrails, an agent can access systems it shouldn’t, expose confidential data, create unreliable information, start unauthorized transactions, skip established workflows or even act against company policy or ethics. These risks are made worse by how fast and independently agent AI works, which can cause big problems before people notice. In the rush to try new things, many companies launch these agents without basic access controls or oversight. The answer is to use proven controls like least privilege, segregation of duties, monitoring and accountability. ... Technical debt isn’t just about code anymore. It’s also about trusting your data, holding models accountable and protecting your brand’s reputation. The organizations that succeed with AI will be the ones that see governance as part of the design process, not as something that causes delays. They’ll move forward with clear plans and measure value and risk together. 


How Data is Reshaping Science – Part 4: The New Trust Problem in Scientific Discovery

Scientific AI runs on architectures spread across billions (possibly trillions soon) of parameters, trained on datasets that remain partially or fully opaque. Peer review was built for methods a human could trace, not pipelines that mutate through thousands of training cycles. The trust layer that once anchored scientific work is now under strain. Traditional validation frameworks fall behind for the same reason. They were designed for fixed algorithms and stable datasets. Modern models shift with each retraining step, and disciplines lack shared benchmarks for measuring accuracy. ... The trust problems emerging across data-driven science point to a missing layer, one that operates beneath the experiments and above the compute. It is the layer that connects data, models, and decisions into a single traceable chain. Without it, every insight relies too heavily on the integrity of (potentially undocumented) the steps to reach this point. A modern governance system would require full provenance tracking. It would need permissions that define who can modify what and have audit trails that record data transformation. This is not an easy task, given how vast the datasets tend to be. Scientific AI complicates this further. These models shift as datasets change and as new configurations alter their behavior. That means science must adopt the same version control rigor seen in highly regulated industries. 

Daily Tech Digest - December 05, 2025


Quote for the day:

“Failure defeats losers, failure inspires winners.” -- Robert T. Kiyosaki



The 'truth serum' for AI: OpenAI’s new method for training models to confess their mistakes

A confession is a structured report generated by the model after it provides its main answer. It serves as a self-evaluation of its own compliance with instructions. In this report, the model must list all instructions it was supposed to follow, evaluate how well it satisfied them and report any uncertainties or judgment calls it made along the way. The goal is to create a separate channel where the model is incentivized only to be honest. ... During training, the reward assigned to the confession is based solely on its honesty and is never mixed with the reward for the main task. "Like the Catholic Church’s 'seal of confession', nothing that the model reveals can change the reward it receives for completing its original task," the researchers write. This creates a "safe space" for the model to admit fault without penalty. This approach is powerful because it sidesteps a major challenge in AI training. The researchers’ intuition is that honestly confessing to misbehavior is an easier task than achieving a high reward on the original, often complex, problem. ... For AI applications, mechanisms such as confessions can provide a practical monitoring mechanism. The structured output from a confession can be used at inference time to flag or reject a model’s response before it causes a problem. For example, a system could be designed to automatically escalate any output for human review if its confession indicates a policy violation or high uncertainty.


Why is enterprise disaster recovery always such a…disaster?

One of the brutal truths about enterprise disaster recovery (DR) strategies is that there is virtually no reliable way to truly test them. ... From a corporate politics perspective, IT managers responsible for disaster recovery have a lot of reasons to avoid an especially meaningful test. Look at it from a risk/reward perspective. They’re going to take a gamble, figuring that any disaster requiring the recovery environment might not happen for a few years. And by then with any luck, they’ll be long gone. ... “Enterprises place too much trust in DR strategies that look complete on slides but fall apart when chaos hits,” he said. “The misunderstanding starts with how recovery is defined. It’s not enough for infrastructure to come back online. What matters is whether the business continues to function — and most enterprises haven’t closed that gap. ... “Most DR tools, even DRaaS, only protect fragments of the IT estate,” Gogia said. “They’re scoped narrowly to fit budget or ease of implementation, not to guarantee holistic recovery. Cloud-heavy environments make things worse when teams assume resilience is built in, but haven’t configured failover paths, replicated across regions, or validated workloads post-failover. Sovereign cloud initiatives might address geopolitical risk, but they rarely address operational realism.


The first building blocks of an agentic Windows OS

Microsoft is adding an MCP registry to Windows, which adds security wrappers and provides discovery tools for use by local agents. An associated proxy manages connectivity for both local and remote servers, with authentication, audit, and authorization. Enterprises will be able to use these tools to control access to MCP, using group policies and default settings to give connectors their own identities. ... Be careful when giving agents access to the Windows file system; use base prompts that reduce the risks associated with file system access. When building out your first agent, it’s worth limiting the connector to search (taking advantage of the semantic capabilities of Windows’ built-in Phi small language model) and reading text data. This does mean you’ll need to provide your own guardrails for agent code running on PCs, for example, forcing read-only operations and locking down access as much as possible. Microsoft’s planned move to a least-privilege model for Windows users could help here, ensuring that agents have as few rights as possible and no avenue for privilege escalation. ... Building an agentic OS is hard, as the underlying technologies work very differently from standard Windows applications. Microsoft is doing a lot to provide appropriate protections, building on its experience in delivering multitenancy in the cloud. 


Syntax hacking: Researchers discover sentence structure can bypass AI safety rules

The findings reveal a weakness in how these models process instructions that may shed light on why some prompt injection or jailbreaking approaches work, though the researchers caution their analysis of some production models remains speculative since training data details of prominent commercial AI models are not publicly available. ... This suggests models absorb both meaning and syntactic patterns, but can overrely on structural shortcuts when they strongly correlate with specific domains in training data, which sometimes allows patterns to override semantic understanding in edge cases. ... In layperson terms, the research shows that AI language models can become overly fixated on the style of a question rather than its actual meaning. Imagine if someone learned that questions starting with “Where is…” are always about geography, so when you ask “Where is the best pizza in Chicago?”, they respond with “Illinois” instead of recommending restaurants based on some other criteria. They’re responding to the grammatical pattern (“Where is…”) rather than understanding you’re asking about food. This creates two risks: models giving wrong answers in unfamiliar contexts (a form of confabulation), and bad actors exploiting these patterns to bypass safety conditioning by wrapping harmful requests in “safe” grammatical styles. It’s a form of domain switching that can reframe an input, linking it into a different context to get a different result.


In 2026, Should Banks Aim Beyond AI?

Developing native AI agents and agentic workflows will allow banks to automate complex journeys while fine-tuning systems to their specific data and compliance landscapes. These platforms accelerate innovation and reinforce governance structures around AI deployment. This next generation of AI applications elevates customer service, fostering deeper trust and engagement. ... But any technological advancement must be paired with accountability and prudent risk management, given the sensitive nature of banking. AI can unlock efficiency and innovation, but its impact depends on keeping human decision-making and oversight firmly in place. It should augment rather than replace human authority, maintaining transparency and accountability in all automated processes. ... The banking environment is too risky for fully autonomous agentic AI workflows. Critical financial decisions require human judgment due to the potential for significant consequences. Nonetheless, many opportunities exist to augment decision-making with AI agents, advanced models and enriched datasets. ... As this evolution unfolds, financial institutions must focus on executing AI initiatives responsibly and effectively. By investing in home-grown platforms, emphasizing explainability, balancing human oversight with automation and fostering adaptive leadership, banks, financial services and insurance providers can navigate the complexities of AI adoption.


Building the missing layers for an internet of agents

The proposed Agent Communication Layer sits above HTTP and focuses on message structure and interaction patterns. It brings together what has been emerging across several protocols and organizes them into a common set of building blocks. These include standardized envelopes, a registry of performatives that define intent, and patterns for one to one or one to many communication. The idea is to give agents a dependable way to understand the type of communication taking place before interpreting the content. A request, an update, or a proposal each follows an expected pattern. This helps agents coordinate tasks without guessing the sender’s intention. The layer does not judge meaning. It only ensures that communication follows predictable rules that all agents can interpret. ... The paper outlines several new risks. Attackers might inject harmful content that fits the schema but tricks the agent’s reasoning. They might distribute altered or fake context definitions that mislead a population of agents. They might overwhelm a system with repetitive semantic queries that drain inference resources rather than network resources. To manage these problems, the authors propose security measures that match the new layer. Signed context definitions would prevent tampering. Semantic firewalls would examine content at the concept level and enforce rules about who can use which parts of a context. 


The Rise of SASE: From Emerging Concept to Enterprise Cornerstone

The case for SASE depends heavily on the business outcomes required, and there can be multiple use cases for SASE deployment. However, not everyone is always aligned around these. Whether you’re looking to modernize systems to boost operational resilience, reduce costs, or improve security to adhere to regulatory compliance, there needs to be alignment around your SASE deployment. Additionally, because of its versatility, SASE demands expertise across networking, cloud security, zero trust, and SD-WAN, but, unfortunately, these skills are in short supply. IT teams must upskill or recruit talent capable of managing (and running) this convergence, while also adapting to new operational models and workflows. ... However, most of the reported benefits don’t focus on tangible or financial outcomes, but rather those that are typically harder to measure, namely boosting operational resilience and enhancing user experience. These are interesting numbers to explore, as SASE investments are often predicated on specific and easily measurable business cases, typically centered around cost savings or mitigation of specific cyber/operational risks. Looking at the benefits from both a networking and security perspective, the data reveals different priorities for SASE adoption: IT Network leaders value operational streamlining and efficiency, while IT Security leaders emphasize secure access and cloud protection. 


Intelligent Banking: A New Standard for Experience and Trust

At its core, Intelligent Banking connects three forces that are redefining what "intelligent" really means: Rising expectations - Customers not only expect their institutions to understand them, but to intuitively put forward recommendations before they realize change is needed. All while acting with empathy while delivering secure, trusted experiences. ... Data abundance - Financial institutions have more data than ever but struggle to turn it into actionable insight that benefits both the customer and the institution. ... AI readiness - For years, AI in banking was at best a buzz word that encapsulated the standard — decision trees, models, rules. ... The next era of AI in banking will be completely different. It will be invisible. Embedded. Contextual. It will be built into the fabric of the experience, not just added on top. And while mobile apps as we know them will likely be around for a while, a fully GenAI native banking experience is both possible and imminent. ... In the age of AI, it’s tempting to see "intelligence" purely as technology alone. But the future of banking will depend just as much on human intelligence as it will artificial intelligence. The expertise, empathy, and judgement of the institutions who understand financial context and complexity blended with the speed, prediction and pattern recognition that uncover insights humans can’t see will create a new standard for banking, one where experiences feel both profoundly human and intelligently anticipatory.


Taking Control of Unstructured Data to Optimize Storage

The modern business preoccupation with collecting and retaining data has become something of a double-edged sword. On the plus side, it has fueled a transformational approach to how organizations are run. On the other hand, it’s rapidly becoming an enormous drain on resources and efficiency. The fact that 80-90% of this information is unstructured, i.e. spread across formats such as documents, images, videos, emails, and sensor outputs, only adds to the difficulty of organizing and controlling it. ... To break this down, detailed metadata insight is essential for revealing how storage is actually being used. Information such as creation dates, last accessed timestamps, and ownership highlights which data is active and requires performance storage, and which has aged out of use or no longer relates to current users. ... So, how can this be achieved? At a fundamental level, storage optimization hinges on adopting a technology approach that manages data, not storage devices; simply adding more and more capacity is no longer viable. Instead, organizations must have the ability to work across heterogeneous storage environments, including multiple vendors, locations and clouds. Tools should support vendor-neutral management so data can be monitored and moved regardless of the underlying platform. Clearly, this has to take place at petabyte scale. Optimization also relies on policy-based data mobility that enables data to be moved based on defined rules, such as age or inactivity, with inactive or long-dormant data.


W.A.R & P.E.A.C.E: The Critical Battle for Organizational Harmony

W.A.R & P.E.A.C.E, the pivotal human lens within TRIAL, designed specifically to address this cultural challenge and shepherd the enterprise toward AARAM (Agentic AI Reinforced Architecture Maturities)2 with what I term “speed 3” transformation of AI. ... The successful, continuous balancing of W.A.R. and P.E.A.C.E. is the biggest battle an Enterprise Architect must win. Just as Tolstoy explored the monumental scope of war against intimate moments of peace in his masterwork, the Enterprise Architect must balance the intense effort to build repositories against the delicate work of fostering organizational harmony. ... The W.A.R. systematically organizes information across the four critical architectural domains defined in our previous article: Business, Information, Technology, and Security (BITS). The true power of W.A.R. lies in its ability to associate technical components with measurable business and financial properties, effectively transforming technical discussions into measurable, strategic imperatives. Each architectural components across BITS are tracked across Plan, Design & Run lifecycle of change under the guardrails of BYTES. ... Achieving effective P.E.A.C.E. mandates a carefully constructed collaborative environment where diverse organizational roles work together toward a shared objective. This requires alignment across all lifecycle stages using social capital and intelligence.

Daily Tech Digest - December 04, 2025


Quote for the day:

"The most difficult thing is the decision to act, the rest is merely tenacity." -- Amelia Earhart


Software Supply Chain Risks: Lessons from Recent Attacks

Modern applications are complex tapestries woven from proprietary code, open-source libraries, third-party APIs, and countless development tools. This interconnected web is the software supply chain, and it has become one of the most critical—and vulnerable—attack surfaces for organizations globally. Supply chain attacks are particularly insidious because they exploit trust. Organizations implicitly trust the code they import from reputable sources and the tools their developers use daily. Attackers have recognized that it's often easier to compromise a less-secure vendor or a widely-used open-source project than to attack a well-defended enterprise directly. Once an attacker infiltrates a supply chain, they gain a "force multiplier" effect. A single malicious update can be automatically pulled and deployed by thousands of downstream users, granting the attacker widespread access instantly. Recent high-profile attacks have shattered the illusion of a secure perimeter, demonstrating that a single compromised component can have catastrophic, cascading effects. ... The era of blindly trusting software components is over. The software supply chain has become a primary battleground for cyberattacks, and the consequences of negligence are severe. By learning from recent attacks and proactively implementing robust security measures like SBOMs, secure pipelines, and rigorous vendor vetting, organizations can significantly reduce their risk and build more resilient, trustworthy software.


Building Bridges, Not Barriers: The Case for Collaborative Data Governance

The collaborative data governance model preserves existing structure while improving coordination among teams through shared standards and processes. This is now more critical to be able to take advantage of AI systems. The collaborative model is an alternative with many benefits for organizations whose central governance bodies – like finance, IT, data and risk – operate in silos. Complex digital and data initiatives, as well as regulatory and ethical concerns, often span multiple domains, making close coordination across departments a necessity. While the collaborative data governance model can be highly effective for complex organizations, there are situations where it may not be appropriate. ... Rather than taking a centralized approach to managing data among multiple governance domains, a federated approach allows each domain to retain its authority while adhering to shared governance standards. In other words, local control with organization-wide cohesion. ... The collaborative governance model is a framework that promotes accessible systems and processes to the organization, rather than a series of burdensome checks and red tape. In other words, under this model, data governance is viewed as an enabler, not a blocker. ... Using effective tools such as data catalogs, policy management and collaboration spaces, shared platforms streamline governance processes and enable seamless communication and cooperation between teams.


China Researches Ways to Disrupt Satellite Internet

In an academic paper published in Chinese last month, researchers at two major Chinese universities found that the communications provided by satellite constellations could be jammed, but at great cost: To disrupt signals from the Starlink network to a region the size of Taiwan would require 1,000 to 2,000 drones, according to a research paper cited in a report in the South China Morning Post. ... Cyber- and electronic-warfare attacks against satellites are being embraced because they pose less risk of collateral damage and are less likely to escalate tensions, says Clayton Swope, deputy director for the Aerospace Security Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington, DC-based policy think tank. ... The constellations are resilient to disruptions. The latest research into jamming constellation-satellite networks was published in the Chinese peer-reviewed journal Systems Engineering and Electronics on Nov. 5 with a title that translates to "Simulation research of distributed jammers against mega-constellation downlink communication transmissions," the SCMP reported. ... China is not just researching ways to disrupt communications for rival nations, but also is developing its own constellation technology to benefit from the same distributed space networks that makes Starlink, EutelSat, and others so reliable, according to the CSIS's Swope.


The Legacy Challenge in Enterprise Data

As companies face extreme complexity with multiple legacy data warehouses and disparate analytical data assets models owned by the line of business analysts, the decision-making becomes challenging when moving to cloud-based data systems for transformation and migration. Where both options are challenging, this is not a one-size-fits-all solution, and careful consideration is needed when making the decision, as this involves millions of dollars and years of critical work. ... Enterprise migrations are long journeys, not short projects. Programs typically span 18 to 24 months, cover hundreds of terabytes of data, and touch dozens of business domains. A single cutover is too risky, while endless pilots waste resources. Phased execution is the only sustainable approach. High-value domains are prioritized to demonstrate progress. Legacy and cloud often run in parallel until validation is complete. Automated validation, DevOps pipelines, and AI-assisted SQL conversion accelerate progress. To avoid burnout, teams are structured with a mix of full-time employees who work closely with business users and managed services that provide technical scale. ... Governance must be embedded from the start. Metadata catalogs track lineage and ownership. Automated validation ensures quality at every stage, not just at cutover. Role-based access controls, encryption, and masking enforce compliance. 


Through the Looking Glass: Data Stewards in the Realm of Gondor

Data Stewards are sought-after individuals today. I have seen many “data steward” job postings over the last six months and read much discussion about the role in various periodicals and postings. I have always agreed with my editor’s conviction that everyone is a data steward, accountable for the data they create, manage, and use. Nevertheless, the role of data steward, as a job and as a career, has established itself in the view of many companies as essential to improving data governance and management. ... “Information Stewardship” is a concept like Data Stewardship and may even predate it, based on my brief survey of articles on these topics. Trevor gives an excellent summary of the essence of stewardship in this context: Stewardship requires the acceptance by the user that the information belongs to the organization as a whole, not any one individual. The information should be shared as needed and monitored for changes in value. ... Data Stewards “own” data, or to be more precise, Data Stewards are responsible for the data owned by the enterprise. If the enterprise is the old-world Lord’s Estate, then the Data Stewardship Team consists of the people who watch over the lifeblood of the estate, including the shepherds who make sure the data is flowing smoothly from field to field, safe from internal and external predators, safe from inclement weather, and safe from disease. ... 


Scaling Cloud and Distributed Applications: Lessons and Strategies

Scaling extends beyond simply adding servers. When scaling occurs, the fundamental question is whether the application requires scaling due to genuine customer demand or whether upstream services experiencing queuing issues slow system response. When threads wait for responses and cannot execute, pressure increases on CPU and memory resources, triggering elastic scaling even though actual demand has not grown. ... Architecture must extend beyond documentation. Creating opinionated architecture templates assists teams in building applications that automatically inherit architectural standards. Applications deploy automatically using manifest-based definitions, so that teams can focus on business functionality rather than infrastructure tooling complexities. ... Infrastructure repaving represents a highly effective practice of systematically rebuilding infrastructure each sprint. Automated processes clean up running instances regularly. This approach enhances security by eliminating configuration drift. When drift exists or patches require application, including zero-day vulnerability fixes, all updates can be systematically incorporated. Extended operation periods create stale resources, performance degradation, and security vulnerabilities. Recreating environments at defined intervals (weekly or bi-weekly) occurs automatically. 


Why Synthetic Data Will Decide Who Wins the Next Wave of AI

Why is synthetic data suddenly so important? The simple answer is that AI has begun bumping into a glass ceiling. Real-world data doesn’t extend far enough to cover all the unlikely edge cases or every scenario that we want our models to live through. Synthetic data allows teams to code in the missing parts directly. Developers construct situations as needed. ... Building synthetic data holds the key to filling the gap when the quality or volume of data needed by AI models is not good enough, but the process to create this data is not easy. Behind the scenes, there’s an entire stack working together. We are talking about simulation engines, generative models like GANs and diffusion systems, large language models (LLMs) for text-based domains. All this creates virtual worlds for training. ... The organizations most affected by the growing need for synthetic data are those that operate in high-risk areas where there is no actual data, or the act of finding it is inefficient. Think of fully autonomous vehicles that can’t simply wait for every dangerous encounter to occur in traffic. Doctors working on a cure for rare diseases but can’t call on thousands of such cases. Trading firms that can’t wait for just the right market shock for their AI models. These teams can turn synthetic data to give them a lesson from situations that are simply not possible (or practical) in real life.


How ABB’s Approach to IT/OT Ensures Cyber Resilience

The convergence of IT and OT creates new vulnerabilities as previously isolated control systems now require integration with enterprise networks. ABB addresses this by embedding security architecture from the start rather than retrofitting it later. This includes proper network segmentation, validated patching protocols and granular access controls that enable safe data connectivity while protecting operational technology. ... On the security front, AI-driven monitoring can identify anomalous patterns in network traffic and system behavior that might indicate a breach attempt, spotting threats that traditional rule-based systems would miss. However, it's crucial to distinguish between embedded AI and Gen AI. Embedded AI in our products optimises processes with predictable, explainable outcomes. This same principle applies to security: AI systems that monitor for threats must be transparent in how they reach conclusions, allowing security teams to understand and validate alerts rather than trusting a black box. ... Secure data exchange protocols, multi-factor authentication on remote access points and validated update mechanisms all work together to enable the connectivity that digital twins require while maintaining security boundaries. The key is recognising that digital transformation and security are interdependent. Organisations investing millions in AI, digital twins or automation while neglecting cybersecurity are building on sand.


Building an MCP server is easy, but getting it to work is a lot harder

"The true power of remote MCP is realized through centralized 'agent gateways' where these servers are registered and managed. This model delivers the essential guardrails that enterprises require," Shrivastava said. That said, agent gateways do come with their own caveats. "While gateways provide security, managing a growing ecosystem of dozens or even hundreds of registered MCP tools introduces a new challenge: orchestration," he said. "The most scalable approach is to add another layer of abstraction: organizing toolchains into 'topics' based on the 'job to be done.'" ... "When a large language model is granted access to multiple external tools via the protocol, there is a significant risk that it may choose the wrong tool, misuse the correct one, or become confused and produce nonsensical or irrelevant outputs, whether through classic hallucinations or incorrect tool use," he explained. ... MCP's scaling limits also present a huge obstacle. The scaling limits exist "because the protocol was never designed to coordinate large, distributed networks of agents," said James Urquhart, field CTO and technology evangelist at Kamiwaza AI, a provider of products that orchestrate and deploy autonomous AI agents. MCP works well in small, controlled environments, but "it assumes instant responses between agents," he said -- an unrealistic expectation once systems grow and "multiple agents compete for processing time, memory or bandwidth."


The quantum clock is ticking and businesses are still stuck in prep mode

The report highlights one of the toughest challenges. Eighty one percent of respondents said their crypto libraries and hardware security modules are not prepared for post quantum integration. Many use legacy systems that depend on protocols designed long before quantum threats were taken seriously. Retrofitting these systems is not a simple upgrade. It requires changes to how keys are generated, stored and exchanged. Skills shortages compound the problem. Many security teams lack experience in testing or deploying post quantum algorithms. Vendor dependence also slows progress because businesses often cannot move forward until external suppliers update their own tooling. ... Nearly every organization surveyed plans to allocate budget toward post quantum projects within the next two years. Most expect to spend between six and ten percent of their cybersecurity budgets on research, tooling or deployment. Spending levels differ by region. More than half of US organizations plan to invest at least eleven percent, far higher than the UK and Germany. ... Contractual requirements from customers and partners are seen as the strongest motivator for adoption. Industry standards rank near the top of the list across most sectors. Many respondents also pointed to upcoming regulations and mandates as drivers. Security incidents ranked surprisingly low in the US, suggesting that market and policy signals hold more influence than hypothetical attack scenarios.

Daily Tech Digest - December 03, 2025


Quote for the day:

“The only true wisdom is knowing that you know nothing.” -- Socrates


How CISOs can prepare for the new era of short-lived TLS certificates

“Shorter certificate lifespans are a gift,” says Justin Shattuck, CSO at Resilience. “They push people toward better automation and certificate management practices, which will later be vital to post-quantum defense.” But this gift, intended to strengthen security, could turn into a curse if organizations are unprepared. Many still rely on manual tracking and renewal processes, using spreadsheets, calendar reminders, or system admins who “just know” when certificates are due to expire. ... “We’re investing in a living cryptographic inventory that doesn’t just track SSL/TLS certificates, but also keys, algorithms, identities, and their business, risk, and regulatory context within our organization and ties all of that to risk,” he says. “Every cert is tied to an owner, an expiration date, and a system dependency, and supported with continuous lifecycle-based communication with those owners. That inventory drives automated notifications, so no expiration sneaks up on us.” ... While automation is important as certificates expire more quickly, how it is implemented matters. Renewing a certificate a fixed number of days before expiration can become unreliable as lifespans change. The alternative is renewing based on a percentage of the certificate’s lifetime, and this method has an advantage: the timing adjusts automatically when the lifespan shortens. “Hard-coded renewal periods are likely to be too long at some point, whereas percentage renewal periods should be fine,” says Josh Aas.


How Enterprises Can Navigate Privacy With Clarity

There's an interesting pattern across organizations of all sizes. When we started discussing DPDPA compliance a year ago, companies fell into two buckets: those already building toward compliance and others saying they'd wait for the final rules. That "wait and see period" taught us a lot. It showed how most enterprises genuinely want to do the right thing, but they often don't know where to start. In practice, mature data protection starts with a simple question that most enterprises haven't asked themselves: What personal data do we have coming in? Which of it is truly personal data? What are we doing with it? ... The first is how enterprises understand personal data itself. I tell clients not to view personal data as a single item but as part of an interconnected web. Once one data point links to another, information that didn't seem personal becomes personal because it's stored together or can be easily connected. ... The second gap is organizational visibility. Some teams process personal data in ways others don't know about. When we speak with multiple teams, there's often a light bulb moment where everyone realizes that data processing is happening in places they never expected. The third gap is third-party management. Some teams may share data under basic commercial arrangements or collect it through processes that seem routine. An IT team might sign up for a new hosting service without realizing it will store customer personal data. 


How to succeed as an independent software developer

Income for freelance developers varies depending on factors such as location, experience, skills, and project type. Average pay for a contractor is about $111,800 annually, according to ZipRecruiter, with top earners making potentially more than $151,000. ... “One of the most important ways to succeed as an independent developer is to treat yourself like a business,” says Darian Shimy, CEO of FutureFund, a fundraising platform built for K-12 schools, and a software engineer by trade. “That means setting up an LLC or sole proprietorship, separating your personal and business finances, and using invoicing and tax tools that make it easier to stay compliant,” Shimy says. ... “It was a full-circle moment, recognition not just for coding expertise, but for shaping how developers learn emerging technologies,” Kapoor says. “Specialization builds identity. Once your expertise becomes synonymous with progress in a field, opportunities—whether projects, media, or publishing—start coming to you.” ... Freelancers in any field need to know how to communicate well, whether it’s through the written word or conversations with clients and colleagues. If a developer communicates poorly, even great talent might not make the difference in landing gigs. ... A portfolio of work tells the story of what you bring to the table. It’s the main way to showcase your software development skills and experience, and is a key tool in attracting clients and projects. 


AI in 5 years: Preparing for intelligent, automated cyber attacks

Cybercriminals are increasingly experimenting with autonomous AI-driven attacks, where machine agents independently plan, coordinate, and execute multi-stage campaigns. These AI systems share intelligence, adapt in real time to defensive measures, and collaborate across thousands of endpoints — functioning like self-learning botnets without human oversight. ... Recent “vibe hacking” cases showed how threat actors embedded social-engineering goals directly into AI configurations, allowing bots to negotiate, deceive, and persist autonomously. As AI voice cloning becomes indistinguishable from the real thing, verifying identity will shift from who is speaking to how behaviourally consistent their actions are, a fundamental change in digital trust models. ... Unlike traditional threats, machine-made attacks learn and adapt continuously. Every failed exploit becomes training data, creating a self-improving threat ecosystem that evolves faster than conventional defences. Check Point Research notes that AI-driven tools like Hexstrike-AI framework, originally built for red-team testing, was weaponised within hours to exploit Citrix NetScaler zero-days. These attacks also operate with unprecedented precision. ... Make DevSecOps a standard part of your AI strategy. Automate security checks across your CI/CD pipeline to detect insecure code, exposed secrets, and misconfigurations before they reach production. 


Threat intelligence programs are broken, here is how to fix them

“An effective threat intelligence program is the cornerstone of a cybersecurity governance program. To put this in place, companies must implement controls to proactively detect emerging threats, as well as have an incident handling process that prioritizes incidents automatically based on feeds from different sources. This needs to be able to correlate a massive amount of data and provide automatic responses to enhance proactive actions,” says Carlos Portuguez ... Product teams, fraud teams, governance and compliance groups, and legal counsel often make decisions that introduce new risk. If they do not share those plans with threat intelligence leaders, PIRs become outdated. Security teams need lines of communication that help them track major business initiatives. If a company enters a new region, adopts a new cloud platform, or deploys an AI capability, the threat model shifts. PIRs should reflect that shift. ... Manual analysis cannot keep pace with the volume of stolen credentials, stealer logs, forum posts, and malware data circulating in criminal markets. Security engineering teams need automation to extract value from this material. ... Measuring threat intelligence remains a challenge for organizations. The report recommends linking metrics directly to PIRs. This prevents metrics that reward volume instead of impact. ... Threat intelligence should help guide enterprise risk decisions. It should influence control design, identity practices, incident response planning, and long term investment.


Europe’s Digital Sovereignty Hinges on Smarter Regulation for Data Access

Europe must seek to better understand, and play into, the reality of market competition in the AI sector. Among the factors impacting AI innovation, access to computing power and data are widely recognized as most crucial. While some proposals have been made to address the former, such as making the continent’s supercomputers available to AI start-ups, little has been proposed with regard to addressing the data access challenge. ... By applying the requirement to AI developers independently of their provenance, the framework ensures EU competitiveness is not adversely impacted. On the contrary, the approach would enable EU-based AI companies to innovate with legal certainty, avoiding the cost and potential chilling effect of lengthy lawsuits compared to their US competitors. Additionally, by putting the onus on copyright owners to make their content accessible, the framework reduces the burden for AI companies to find (or digitize) training material, which affects small companies most. ... Beyond addressing a core challenge in the AI market, the example of the European Data Commons highlights how government action is not just a zero-sum game between fostering innovation and setting regulatory standards. By scrapping its digital regulation in the rush to boost the economy and gain digital sovereignty, the EU is surrendering its longtime ambition and ability to shape global technology in its image.


New training method boosts AI multimodal reasoning with smaller, smarter datasets

Recent advances in reinforcement learning with verifiable rewards (RLVR) have significantly improved the reasoning abilities of large language models (LLMs). RLVR trains LLMs to generate chain-of-thought (CoT) tokens (which mimic the reasoning processes humans use) before generating the final answer. This improves the model’s capability to solve complex reasoning tasks such as math and coding. Motivated by this success, researchers have applied similar RL-based methods to large multimodal models (LMMs), showing that the benefits can extend beyond text to improve visual understanding and problem-solving across different modalities. ... According to Zhang, the step-by-step process fundamentally changes the reliability of the model's outputs. "Traditional models often 'jump' directly to an answer, which means they explore only a narrow portion of the reasoning space," he said. "In contrast, a reasoning-first approach forces the model to explicitly examine multiple intermediate steps... [allowing it] to traverse much deeper paths and arrive at answers with far more internal consistency." ... The researchers also found that token efficiency is crucial. While allowing a model to generate longer reasoning steps can improve performance, excessive tokens reduce efficiency. Their results show that setting a smaller "reasoning budget" can achieve comparable or even better accuracy, an important consideration for deploying cost-effective enterprise applications.


Why Firms Can’t Ignore Agentic AI

The danger posed by agentic AI stems from its ability carry out specific tasks with limited oversight. “When you give autonomy to a machine to operate within certain bounds, you need to be confident of two things: That it has been provided with excellent context so it knows how to make the right decisions – and that it is only completing the task asked of it, without using the information it’s been trusted with for any other purpose,” James Flint, AI practice lead at Securys, said. Mike Wilkes, enterprise CISO, Aikido Security, describes agentic AI as “giving a black box agent the ability to plan, act, and adapt on its own.” “In most companies that now means a new kind of digital insider risk with highly-privileged access to code, infrastructure, and data,” he warns. When employees start to use the technology without guardrails, shadow agentic AI introduces a number of risks. ... Adding to the risk, agentic AI is becoming easier to build and deploy. This will allow more employees to experiment with AI agents – often outside IT oversight, creating new governance and security challenges, says Mistry. Agentic AI can be coupled with the recently open-sourced Model Context Protocol (MCP), a protocol released by Anthropic that provides an open standard for orchestrating connections between AI assistants and data sources. By streamlining the work of development and security teams, this can “turbocharge productivity,” but it comes with caveats, says Pieter Danhieux, co-founder and CEO of Secure Code Warrior.


Why supply chains are the weakest link in today’s cyber defenses

One of the key reasons is that attackers want to make the best return on their efforts, and have learned that one of the easiest ways into a well-defended enterprise is through a partner. No thief would attempt to smash down the front door of a well-protected building if they could steal a key and slip in through the back. There’s also the advantage of scale: one company providing IT, HR, accounting or sales services to multiple customers may have fewer resources to protect itself, that’s the natural point of attack. ... When the nature of cyber risks changes so quickly, yearly audits of suppliers can’t provide the most accurate evidence of their security posture. The result is an ecosystem built on trust, where compliance often becomes more of a comfort blanket. Meanwhile, attackers are taking advantage of the lag between each audit cycle, moving far faster than the verification processes designed to stop them. Unless verification evolves into a continuous process, we’ll keep trusting paperwork while breaches continue to spread through the supply chain. ... Technology alone won’t fix the supply chain problem, and a change in mindset is also needed. Too many boards are still distracted by the next big security trend, while overlooking the basics that actually reduce breaches. Breach prevention needs to be measured, reported and prioritized just like any other business KPI. 


How AI Is Redefining Both Business Risk and Resilience Strategy

When implemented across prevention and response workflows, automation reduces human error, frees analysts’ time and preserves business continuity during high-pressure events. One applicable example includes automated data-restore sequences, which validate backup integrity before bringing systems online. Another example involves intelligent network rerouting that isolates subnets while preserving service. Organizations that deploy AI broadly across prevention and response report significantly lower breach costs. ... Biased AI models can produce skewed outputs which lead to poor decisions during a crisis. When a model is trained on limited or biased historical data, it can favor certain groups, locations or signals and then recommend actions overlook real need. In practical terms, this can mean an automated triage system that routes emergency help away from underserved neighborhoods. ... Turn risk controls into operational patterns. Use staged deployments, automated rollback triggers and immutable model artifacts that map to code and data versions. Those practices reduce the likelihood an unseen model change will result in a system outage. Next, pair AI systems with fallbacks for critical flows. This step ensures core services can continue if models fail. Monitoring should also be a consideration. It should display model metrics, such as drift and input distribution, alongside business measures, including latency and error rates.