Posts

Showing posts from June 7, 2026

Filigran XTM One: Automating continuous threat exposure management

- Automates continuous threat exposure management (CTEM) workflows  - Enables full model flexibility and on-premises deployment - Reduces analyst workload and time-to-value Filigran, the open-source threat management company, has released XTM One, an AI-native agentic layer that automates CTEM workflows across the Filigran XTM Platform.  XTM One  introduces a dedicated AI orchestration layer that connects  OpenCTI  and  OpenAEV  into a single, continuous workflow.  Filigran explained that traditionally, security teams would have to move manually between tools, ingesting threat intelligence in one system, building attack scenarios in another, and tracking remediation in separate dashboards.  XTM One automates those handoffs by coordinating AI agents across the lifecycle, creating a continuous path from raw threat intelligence to validated defensive action while preserving full visibility and control.  The XTM Platform already includes ...

Why “strong” passwords still fail (and what to do instead)

Image
By Tomer Bar, Semperis, Associate VP of Security Research We’ve been using passwords to prove who we are since the very first multiuser computers. Decades later, they’re still with us—and still causing trouble. Passwords have a terrible reputation, but that’s not really the password’s fault. It’s ours. Most of the risk comes from human limitations and predictable behaviour, not from the mathematics behind “guessing every possible combination”. Concept artwork generated by Google Gemini on the topic of rainbow tables. This image might be factually inaccurate. Let’s look at why “strong” passwords can be weaker than you think, what advanced attackers do and how to choose passwords that are hard to crack. The comforting myth is that a 10-character password using upper and lowercase letters, numbers, special characters must be secure simply because its theoretical number of combinations is enormous. The total search space is in the order of tens of quintillions of combinations (around ...