Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Top CWPP Tools for Kubernetes 2026 - Comparison Guide

What is a Cloud Workload Protection Platform (CWPP)? A CWPP is a security tool that protects running workloads—containers, virtual machines, and serverless functions—across their entire lifecycle. For Kubernetes environments, this means protecting pods and containers from build time through deployment and into production runtime, covering threats like cryptomining, reverse shells, and lateral movement.

Best eBPF Solutions for Security: A Practitioner's Guide to Runtime Protection

What is the best eBPF security tool for Kubernetes? For detection-only, Falco. For detection plus enforcement, Tetragon or KubeArmor. For full-stack correlation across cloud, Kubernetes, container, and application layers, ARMO CADR. The right choice depends on whether you need basic visibility, policy enforcement, or complete attack story generation that reduces investigation time by 90%+. Why do most eBPF security tools fail teams? They create more alerts, not better understanding.

How to Compare Cloud Security Tools: The Evaluation Framework

You’re not struggling to find cloud security tools. You’re struggling to compare them meaningfully. Every vendor claims “comprehensive coverage” and “real-time detection.” Their feature matrices look identical. Their demos all show impressive dashboards catching simulated attacks.

Best CNAPP for Kubernetes: Why Runtime Context Is the Only Criteria That Matters

Your CNAPP dashboard shows 10,000 critical findings from last night’s scan. Your CSPM flags misconfigurations every hour. Yet when the SOC asks what actually happened during last week’s incident, you’re still stitching together logs from five different tools to build a timeline that makes sense. Sound familiar? We recently spoke with a platform security lead at a fintech company running 400+ microservices on Kubernetes. Their CNAPP generated 47,000 findings in Q3.

Best Container Security Solutions for 2026: From Scanning to Runtime Protection

What’s the difference between container scanning and container security? Scanning finds vulnerabilities in images before deployment—it’s container auditing, not container security. Real security requires runtime visibility: seeing what processes execute, what network connections occur, and what files get accessed while containers run. Most teams have scanning covered. Most teams are blind at runtime.

Best Cloud Compliance Tools in 2026: From Audit-Prep to Runtime Verification

What are the three types of cloud compliance tools? Audit-prep platforms (Drata, Vanta) automate evidence collection for certifications. Security posture management/CSPM (Wiz, Prisma Cloud) scan configurations at a point in time. Runtime compliance verification (ARMO, Sysdig) monitors actual workload behavior continuously. Choosing the wrong type means solving for the wrong problem. What is compliance drift and why does it matter? The gap between your last scan and your current state.

Best Cloud Workload Protection Solutions: A Runtime-First Evaluation Guide

What is a cloud workload protection platform (CWPP)? Security for the workloads actually running in your cloud—VMs, containers, and serverless functions doing real work. Unlike posture management (CSPM) that checks configurations, CWPPs monitor processes, network connections, and application behavior to catch threats as they happen. What’s the difference between CSPM, CWPP, CNAPP, and CADR? CSPM scans cloud settings for misconfigurations. CWPP protects running workloads.

Best ADR Security Solutions in 2026: Why Full-Stack Visibility Beats Siloed Alerts

What is ADR (Application Detection & Response)? A security tool that monitors application-layer behavior—API calls, function execution, code paths—to detect and respond to threats in real-time. Different from EDR (endpoint-focused) or CDR (cloud infrastructure-focused), ADR sees what’s happening inside your applications. Why do most ADR solutions fail? They only see one layer.

What Is the Best Security for NGINX in Kubernetes? (Beyond Configuration)

The best security combines configuration controls (TLS, headers, network policies, pod security) with runtime behavioral monitoring that detects anomalies your configuration can’t see. Configuration creates the baseline—it defines what should happen. Runtime protection catches what gets through—it shows what is happening. You need both, but most teams only have the first.