Enterprise security stories
The move puts KnowBe4's product strategy under a long-serving engineer as the company expands tools to counter AI-driven threats and shadow AI.
The new service aims to help security teams cut alert overload and tool sprawl as firms seek faster response from one cloud platform.
Customers should see fewer bespoke integrations as SailPoint lets partners build native applications on its Atlas foundation.
Customers moving ageing identity systems to the cloud could cut migration time and engineering effort, SailPoint says, with no extra fee.
The cloud service aims to cut alert overload and tool sprawl for security teams under pressure to investigate and respond faster.
Government agencies will gain wider access to application security tools as the partnership places Checkmarx products on Carahsoft's procurement channels.
Customers can now buy Illumio tools through Check Point as the firms tighten integration to curb AI-driven breaches and lateral movement.
The listing should speed procurement for cloud customers as employers face rising risks from impersonation, fraud and stolen credentials.
Regulated firms can now scan code for flaws without sending sensitive data to external AI services, as AISLE targets private deployments.
With AI speeding up attacks, 53% of security leaders say point-in-time tests are already outdated by the time reports land.
The funding underscores investor demand for AI-focused cybersecurity tools as enterprises face new endpoint risks from human users and agents.
Most security teams still miss the value in their footage, as only incident-led reviews turn vast video archives into useful evidence.
Pressure is mounting on security teams as AI spending rises, with 68% saying the job has become harder over two years.
Businesses deploying autonomous AI agents face tighter oversight as Zscaler adds controls for agent access, data flows and endpoint threats.
The alliance aims to help defenders spot and contain identity-based attacks before they disrupt access across hybrid networks.
The new controls could help enterprises stop AI agents from exporting data or changing records when their actions stray beyond approved intent.
It aims to stop autonomous software from keeping access it no longer needs as enterprises rush to use AI agents across business systems.
The move would deepen SailPoint's reach into fast-growing machine identity risks as firms race to control AI agents and cloud credentials.
The tie-up aims to help Australian organisations spot suspicious activity sooner as AI-driven systems and human users blur traditional security boundaries.
Runtime behaviour, not login checks, is now seen as the key control as businesses put AI agents into live systems and data.