The growing complexity of cyber threats, paired with limited resources, makes it essential for companies to adopt a more comprehensive approach that combines human vigilance with AI's capabilities.
The Christmas Eve compromise of data-security firm Cyberhaven's Chrome extension spotlights the challenges in shoring up third-party software supply chains.
Changes to the healthcare privacy regulation, including technical controls for network segmentation, multifactor authentication, and encryption, would strengthen cybersecurity protections for electronic health information and address evolving threats against healthcare entities.
Windows servers are vulnerable to a dangerous LDAP vulnerability that could be used to crash multiple servers at once and should be patched immediately.
The results of Dark Reading's 2024 Strategic Security Survey suggest that security teams continue to grapple with the challenges that come with increased cloud adoption, such as data visibility and loss of controls. Managing cloud risks will be a focus for security teams in 2025.
AI tools will enable significant productivity and efficiency benefits for organizations in the coming year, but they also will exacerbate privacy, governance, and security risks.
In what's being called a "major cybersecurity incident," Beijing-backed adversaries broke into cyber vendor BeyondTrust to access the US Department of the Treasury workstations and steal unclassified data, according to a letter sent to lawmakers.
Organizations in the region should expect to see threat actors accelerate their use of AI tools and mount ongoing "harvest now, decrypt later" attacks for various malicious use cases.
The US water sector suffered a stream of cyberattacks over the past year-and-a-half from a mix of cybercriminals, hacktivists, and nation-state hacking teams. Here's how the industry and ICS/OT security experts are working to better secure vulnerable drinking and wastewater utilities.
Kelly Jackson Higgins, Editor-in-Chief, Dark Reading
Sometimes it feels like burnout is an inevitable part of working in cybersecurity. But a little bit of knowledge can help you and your staff stay healthy.