Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Reach Recognized in Gartner Emerging Tech Report on Domain-Specific Language Models for SecOps

In its January 2026 report, Emerging Tech: Tech Innovators in Domain-Specific Language Models for SecOps, Gartner examines how domain-specific language models (DSLMs) are reshaping security operations. The report explains that DSLMs are designed to address the limitations of general-purpose language models by focusing on a particular task or use case – in this case, cybersecurity.

Demystifying the Alphabet Soup That Is Detection and Response

It’s impossible to walk into a tradeshow these days without getting blasted by a wall of acronyms. Everywhere you look, vendors are cramming two to four perfectly serviceable words into a string of capital letters arranged to sound cooler than they actually are. This wouldn’t be so bad if it didn’t routinely derail meetings, product decisions, and sometimes whole strategies.

Why AI-Native Endpoint DLP Is The Foundation of Modern Data Security

For a long time, data loss prevention (DLP) lived in the margins of security programs. It was something teams deployed to satisfy a requirement or reduce obvious risk. A handful of policies, some visibility into network traffic, maybe a scan of cloud storage. That was usually enough. That model reflected how work used to happen. Data moved more slowly, lived in fewer places, and followed more predictable paths. That is no longer true.

Falcon for XIoT Extends Asset Protection to Healthcare Environments

CrowdStrike Falcon for XIoT is extending its industry-leading protections to medical devices in healthcare environments. This will provide comprehensive security for patient care at a time when healthcare organizations are a key target for threat actors. As of January 2026, the HHS listed over 750 reported breaches within healthcare environments that were under investigation.

What Happens When Your Security Fails

Security controls fail when countermeasures are bypassed or someone inside goes off script, and incident response decides whether the business survives the hit. Incidents are inevitable, so teams need plans, rehearsals and clear roles long before a real breach arrives, not during the worst day of the year. ⸻ For more information about us or if you have any questions you would like us to discuss email podcast@razorthorn.com. We give our clients a personalised, integrated approach to information security, driven by our belief in quality and discretion..

Why The C Suite Causes Security Disasters

Leadership often rejects war gaming and treats incident practice as a waste of precious diary slots, then chaos erupts in the first five minutes of a real breach. Without clear command, trust in security staff and a standard way of working, executives rush to improvise and turn an incident into a full scale disaster. ⸻ For more information about us or if you have any questions you would like us to discuss email podcast@razorthorn.com. We give our clients a personalised, integrated approach to information security, driven by our belief in quality and discretion..

Hackerbot-Claw Crosses the Line - The 443 Podcast - Episode 361

This week on the podcast, we chat about an OpenClaw bot that moved beyond vulnerability research and into malicious activity. Before that, we cover an AI-discovered vulnerability in the pac4j-jwt authentication library before ending with a discussion on an upcoming California law designed to help make age verification in the digital age easier, but with massive consequences.

Trusted AI Adoption (Part 1): Consolidation

Imagine your lead Software Engineer walks into your office and says, “Good news! I just deployed that critical update to production. I wrote the code on my personal laptop, didn’t run it through CI/CD, skipped the security scan, and just copied the files directly to the server with a USB drive.” You would fire them. Or you would revoke their access immediately.

CVE-2026-27739: Angular SSR Request Vulnerability Enabling Server-Side Request Forgery

A critical vulnerability has been discovered in Angular Server-Side Rendering (SSR) that could allow attackers to manipulate request handling and trigger unauthorized server-side requests. Tracked as CVE-2026-27739, the vulnerability arises from how Angular SSR reconstructs request origins using HTTP headers such as Host and X-Forwarded-*. In affected versions, these headers were not strictly validated before being used to build request URLs.

Top Vulnerability Prioritization Tools Compared: 2026 Edition

Why do 3,000 CVEs not mean 3,000 real problems? Most vulnerability scanners flag every CVE in your container images without checking whether the vulnerable code is actually loaded and executed at runtime. Only 2–5% of alerts typically require action, which means your team is likely spending days triaging theoretical risks while genuinely exploitable vulnerabilities stay buried.