Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

The top seven skills security analysts need to succeed, according to security leaders

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, demand for security analysts is expected to grow by more than 30% over the next decade, far outpacing the average for other roles. That’s good news for those entering or advancing in the field. But with heavy workloads and constant pressure to keep up with evolving threats, professional development can easily fall by the wayside. So how can security analysts stand out to hiring managers — and make sure their career path stays on track?

From backlog to breakthrough: enhancing IT service delivery and support with automation

Scaling IT operations was never going to be easy. By 2025, it was fair to expect that technology would ease classic challenges like high workloads, rising operational costs, and end-user friction. Yet IT leaders still face mounting pressure across identity and access management (IAM), endpoint management, request fulfillment, and incident response. Today’s end users are more demanding. IT operations are more complex. And time is in short supply.

Tines Workbench Bootcamp

Join us for a special bootcamp exploring our universal AI copilot, Tines Workbench. Workbench is a Tines-powered AI chat interface where you can take action and access proprietary data in real-time, privately and securely. In this 45-minute session, get hands-on experience using Tines Workbench, learning how to combine the power of secure AI chat and enterprise workflows. You can view the bootcamp user guide here.

Where AI meets action: How The Trade Desk enhances security ops with Tines Workbench

While AI represents a fundamental turning point for organizations, many teams are still struggling to realize its full potential. They’re looking for AI to do more, while maintaining crucial security and privacy guardrails. That’s where Tines Workbench comes in, a universal AI copilot. Workbench empowers you to incorporate data from across your stack and take action within a single, secure architecture.

What's new in Tines: April 2025 edition

Workbench offers many powerful capabilities, and with it, we believe you should be able to use any of your tools with their custom configurations. So, we decided private templates should be available for Workbench conversations. And the ability to take control of Tines AI features doesn’t stop there: Read more on private templates →

GitLab's CISO Josh Lemos on the pros and cons of making security practices public

In this week’s episode of The Future of Security Operations podcast, Thomas is joined by Josh Lemos, CISO at GitLab. Throughout his 15-year career in security, Josh has led teams at ServiceNow, Cylance, and Square. Known for his expertise in AI-driven security strategies, Josh is also a board member with HiddenLayer. He drives innovation at GitLab with a relentless focus on offensive security, identity management, and automation.

GitLab's CISO Josh Lemos on the pros and cons of making security practices public

In this week’s episode of The Future of Security Operations podcast, I'm joined by Josh Lemos, CISO at GitLab. Throughout his 15-year career in security, Josh has led teams at ServiceNow, Cylance, and Square. Known for his expertise in AI-driven security strategies, Josh is also a board member with HiddenLayer. He drives innovation at GitLab with a relentless focus on offensive security, identity management, and automation. Josh and I discuss.

The end of muckwork

Muckwork is the invisible drag on every company. It’s the repetitive, manual, low-leverage work we tolerate because we assume it’s necessary. Copying data between systems. Triaging alerts. Clicking through approvals. Tasks that keep things running but slow everything down. In 2006, Jeff Bezos called the backend plumbing of web apps “muck.” AWS was created to eliminate it. Today, the same kind of work is everywhere in the enterprise. We call it muckwork.