7 matches found
Beyond Zero: Enterprise Security for the AI Era
The rise of autonomous AI agents and the accelerating velocity of corporate data access are stretching the application-centric model of zero trust security to its breaking point. This paper introduces Beyond Zero, a new security paradigm designed for the AI era. The Beyond Zero architecture...
Agentic Governance: Why It Matters Now
AI agents now act inside the trust boundary with real credentials, and agentic governance is what keeps them from quietly breaking things at machine speed...
Meet Agent Val: Closing the Validation Gap in Exposure Management at Machine Speed with Agentic AI
Executive Summary The primary challenge in vulnerability management is proving what is actually exploitable. Many vulnerabilities are not exploited, but still drain resources. Traditional tools often fail to validate real risks. Agent Val, within Qualys Enterprise TruRisk Management, delivers thi...
When Attacks Come Faster Than Patches: Why 2026 Will be the Year of Machine-Speed Security
The Race for Every New CVE Based on multiple 2025 industry reports: roughly 50 to 61 percent of newly disclosed vulnerabilities saw exploit code weaponized within 48 hours. Using the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog as a reference, hundreds of software flaws are now confirmed as...
Why AI-Powered Firewall Defense Is the Boldest Cybersecurity Shift of 2025
Static firewalls are failing. Discover how AI-powered firewalls predict, adapt, and defend at machine speed — reshaping cybersecurity in 2025 and beyond...
Microsoft Secure: Explore innovations transforming the future of security
Building a more secure future requires an end-to-end approach. There is no question that technology plays an essential role, but security will always be human-centered. That’s what Microsoft Secure is all about. It’s about sharing knowledge, best practices, and technology innovations that empower...
NSA-Backed OpenC2.org Aims to Defend Systems at Machine Speed
NEW YORK–The dynamics of a cyberattack often include speed, automation and adaptive tradecraft. Mounting an effective defense, however, isn’t always fast enough. To help even the score, a group led by the National Security Agency called OpenC2.org is developing an open, standardized computer...