Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

1Password's new benchmark teaches AI agents how not to get scammed

As we embed AI agents into our lives and workflows, we’re learning the (sometimes surprising) ways in which they outperform human beings, and other ways in which they fall short. And occasionally, we find an example where agents, paradoxically, are both better and worse than their human users.

Preemptive Defense Is No Longer Optional: Why Frost & Sullivan Is Calling for Earlier Fraud Intervention

Preemptive cybersecurity defense refers to the ability to detect and disrupt fraud and account takeover attempts before credentials are misused and damage occurs. According to a 2026 analyst brief from Frost & Sullivan, most enterprise fraud and cybersecurity controls still activate too late in the attack lifecycle to prevent loss.

Shift Left Security: Compress Time-to-Detect and Reclaim Hours for High-Impact Work

Imagine this: a customer clicks a paid search ad that looks exactly like you. Same logo. Same layout. Same tone. They enter credentials. They hand everything to a scammer. Your team finds out later. When the fraud case lands. When the customer complains. When a suspicious login alert finally fires. That’s not a tooling problem. It’s a timing problem. Shift-left security is how you get the time back.

MomentProof Deploys Patented Digital Asset Protection

MomentProof, Inc., a provider of AI-resilient digital asset certification and verification technology, today announced the successful deployment of MomentProof Enterprise for AXA, enabling cryptographically authentic, tamper-proof digital assets for insurance claims processing. MomentProof's patented technology certifies images, video, voice recordings, and associated metadata at the moment of capture, ensuring claims evidence is protected against AI-based manipulation, deepfakes, and other malicious digital alterations.

Account Takeover Fraud in 2026: How Attacks Really Happen and How to Stop Them Before Impact

Account takeover (ATO) fraud is a critical threat to digital businesses. Despite heavy investment in MFA and login anomaly detection, many attacks succeed because they bypass traditional safeguards entirely. Modern ATO doesn’t start at the login screen. It begins upstream with pre-login exposure and real-time credential relay, allowing attackers to hijack sessions before traditional defenses even engage.

Defending against deepfake cyberattacks: Why trust is the new security perimeter

Deepfake technology is now a legitimate enterprise level threat. What started as a potentially disturbing AI capability has rapidly become a powerful tool for cybercriminals and one that exploits the most fundamental element of business communication: trust. A new report from Info‑Tech Research Group, Defend Against Deepfake Cyberattacks, breaks down how to understand and assess the risk deepfakes pose to organizations of all sizes.

INETCO team shares fraud predictions for 2026

From real-time payment (RTP) scams to account takeovers to card testing, Visa reports that 98% of merchants experienced one or more types of fraud in 2025. No wonder it has gone down in history as the year these crimes exploded in scope. So what does 2026 have in store? According to the INETCO Team, the coming months will see payment fraud evolve like never before — into something more autonomous and far harder for banks and payment processors to detect using traditional approaches.

My close call with an adoption scam and the red flags to watch for

Adoption fraud can target hopeful families. Discover common scams, warning signs, and how to protect your adoption journey. Adoption fraud can blindside even the most prepared families, especially when emotions run high. Understanding common adoption scams and how to stay safe can help you move forward with more peace of mind. Adoption fraud is a scam in which someone uses deception to extract money, gifts, or emotional leverage from people hoping to adopt.

It's About Time: Why Memcyco Raised $37M, and Why Now

Digital fraud hasn’t stood still. Attackers have adopted automation, refined tooling, and improved coordination across phishing, impersonation, and account takeover (ATO). In that sense, fraud has become smarter in how it’s delivered and scaled. But this form of sophistication isn’t primarily about more complex technical breaches, and it doesn’t explain why losses continue to rise even as enterprises deploy increasingly advanced security controls.