Cyber Threat stories
The ranking highlights growing demand for intelligence that can guide detection and response inside security tools, rather than stand-alone reports.
More ANZ resellers can now access Huntress tools as the deal aims to help smaller firms counter rising email and remote-access attacks.
Broader attacker activity is increasingly moving beyond stolen credentials, even as identity still accounted for 58.7% of incidents in Q1 2026.
Businesses are racing to upgrade defences as Yubico says quantum computers could expose banking, health data and other records within years.
Ransomware attacks are spreading faster as AI helps criminals exploit flaws within 24 to 48 hours, the report says.
Recurring revenue lifted quarterly profit and cash flow at Check Point, even as sales changes hit its security appliance business.
Security teams can now automate hunts and investigations from existing workflows as Command Zero opens its platform to AI agents and external systems.
With no further application window guaranteed, companies are being urged to move quickly if they want a branded web suffix to curb spoofing and phishing.
Businesses face rising exposure as AI is used to sharpen phishing, while insecure in-house tools and weak controls widen attack surfaces.
UK businesses face a growing data security dilemma as US laws can force American tech giants to hand over customer information.
Factories face the highest cyber exposure, with industrial manufacturers hit by 1,567 attacks a week and 1,607 breaches a year, Digitain says.
Leak-site noise is making it harder for firms to tell real breaches from extortion theatre, as active sites hit 91 in the first quarter of 2026.
Attackers could soon exploit software flaws faster and at scale, as security firms say AI is narrowing defenders' response time.
Growing demand for sanctions checks, ownership scrutiny and cyber risk is driving Heligan's move into specialist intelligence for deals and disputes.
Only 10% of small firms train staff on AI security, leaving many exposed as adoption grows and cyber fears rise.
The findings add pressure on ministers to modernise the 1990 Computer Misuse Act as breaches hit 43% of UK businesses and 28% of charities.
The hire underscores how support quality can sway renewals and growth as cyber buyers demand help with deployment and integration.
Customers will now get independent assurance that Nebula Global Services has tested its defences against common cyber threats across its systems.
Repeated phishing training helped cut Singapore staff click rates to 7.4% from 17%, despite more than 8,500 fake emails sent.
Staff shortages, legacy systems and AI demands are leaving most IT decision-makers in Irish companies reporting stress and mental health issues.