The Autonomous Threat: How AI Crossed The Rubicon From Assistant To Attacker
In a nondescript office building in San Francisco this September, security researchers at Anthropic detected something that had never been documented before. Their Claude artificial intelligence system was operating thousands of requests per second against corporate networks across three continents. But the humans directing it were barely touching their keyboards.
Play Ransomware Group Targets Enterprise Infrastructure with Surgical Precision
As ransomware continues to evolve from opportunistic crime to targeted operations against high-value entities, security leaders face a sobering reality: the threat actors are professional, persistent, and continuously improving their craft. The question for enterprise security programs is no longer whether they could be compromised, but whether they can detect and respond to a compromise before irreversible damage occurs.
The Automation Problem: Why Security Teams Are Burning Out Despite Heavy Investment
Here's what I see happening: Security teams buy automation platforms, then try to force their operations into generic, out-of-the-box playbooks that look good in demos but fall apart in real incidents. The result? Analysts ignore the automation and go back to doing things manually.