Rising geopolitical tensions are reflected (or in some cases preceded) by cyber operations, while technology itself has become politicized. Letβs admit it: we are in the middle of it.Β
Introduction: One tech power to rule them all is a thing of the pastΒ
The relative safety, peace and prosperity that much of the world has enjoyed since 1945 was not accidental. It emerged from the ashes
Unmasking impostors is something the art world has faced for decades, and there are valuable lessons from the works of Elmyr de Hory that can apply to the world of defensive cybersecurity. During the 1960s, de Hory gained infamy as a premier forger, passing off counterfeit masterworks of Picasso, Matisse, and Renoir to unsuspecting collectors and renowned museums. Over the next several decades,
Most teams have security tools in place. Alerts are firing, dashboards look clean, threat intel is flowing in. On the surface, everything feels under control.
But one question usually stays unanswered: Would your defenses actually stop a real attack?
Thatβs where things get shaky. A control exists, so itβs assumed to work. A detection rule is active, so itβs expected to catch something. But very