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The Security Strategist

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The Security Strategist
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232 episodes

  • The Security Strategist

    AI Hype vs Reality: What Security Leaders Are Getting Wrong

    2026/06/17 | 22 mins.
    Walk the floor of any security conference, and you'll hear the same story that AI is transforming threat detection, closing the vulnerability gap, and redefining cyber defence. But the data suggests security professionals aren't buying into the hype as much as vendors might expect.
    According to Oliver Spence, CEO of Cybaverse and a former Royal Marine, the cybersecurity industry has a marketing problem, and that problem is making organisations less secure. In this episode of the Security Strategist Podcast, Spencer sits down with Trisha Pillay to examine where security leaders are being misled, why buzzwords are replacing meaningful outcomes, and what organisations should be focusing on instead.
    Why AI Falls Short
    Research conducted with security professionals at Infosec Security found that 87 per cent of respondents believe AI increases risk rather than mitigates it. Six in ten said their organisation didn't have the resources to manage the threats AI introduces. These aren't the numbers of an industry confidently embracing a new era. They're the numbers of a sector that's been oversold.
    Spence puts it plainly: "There's a lot of money from VCs being pumped into cybersecurity, and cybersecurity does marketing extremely well. Which means people end up buying tools. And quite often, tools are purchased, and they barely make it out of the onboarding phase." The hype, in other words, is moving faster than reality, and security leaders are paying the price.
    What the Mythos Release Actually Taught Us
    To understand where AI hype collides hardest with security reality, look at what happened with Mythos. The frontier AI model was made available to a limited group of organisations through Anthropic's Project Glasswing initially around 12 companies, including Microsoft and CrowdStrike, and later expanded to more security businesses. The intent was to test and validate a security-focused AI capability at the highest level.
    Within 24 to 48 hours of Fable's release, the security solution built on Mythos was being released, and someone had already found a prompt that bypassed its controls. Shortly after, the US government restricted access to the model for organisations outside the United States.
    For Spence, the lesson isn't that AI is useless. It's that the hype around AI security outpaces what even the best-resourced organisations can actually control.
    "If the top security companies in the world, dedicated to testing and securing these AI frameworks, still haven't been able to secure it, how does a smaller mid-market business take on that security challenge?"
    His answer cuts against the grain of most vendor messaging that nothing about AI development, including Mythos, has actually changed what organisations should be doing. "If you look at the NCSC's top ten steps, it's all about fundamentals. And if you have those right, you will still be secure from AI-driven attacks." That's not a comfortable message for vendors selling AI-native security platforms, but it's the one the data supports.
    Where Security Leaders Are Getting It Wrong
    The most common mistake Spence sees is organisations acquiring tools in response to fear rather than strategy. AI marketing is particularly effective at generating that fear, which is exactly why the cycle keeps repeating.
    "There's a culture that a product is just going to do everything for you and save your bacon in a time of issues. The magic fairy dust of: buy this product and it solves all your problems."
    The result is tool sprawl at a scale most boards don't realise. The average mid-market company runs between 30 and 40 security products. Enterprise organisations frequently exceed 80 or 90. And yet breaches persist. Operational complexity grows. Security teams burn out managing tools rather than managing threats.
    Six in ten security professionals surveyed said AI hype was pushing them to fixate on the volume of vulnerabilities rather than how to manage them. That's a direct consequence of marketing designed to create urgency, and it's causing leaders to make reactive purchasing decisions instead of strategic ones.
    The fix isn't complicated, but it requires discipline: define the outcome you need to achieve before you look at a single product. "What is the outcome that we need to achieve as a business? Make sure you have those written down. Then look at which tool maps to solving those outcomes." Tool mapping, not tool accumulation, is what an effective security strategy looks like.
    The Vulnerability Volume Trap
    One of the clearest examples of hype distorting reality is how organisations are handling vulnerability management or failing to. AI has made vulnerability discovery faster and more accessible, both for defenders and attackers. The next wave of AI-enabled attacks, beyond the phishing use cases that became widespread first, is exploitation at scale. AI scanning infrastructure for gaps faster than human teams can identify and close them. That's a real threat but the response many organisations have is to treat every vulnerability finding as equally urgent, which is where the hype machine takes over.
    Spence gives a concrete example: a vulnerability scanner might flag four instances of an outdated version of Chrome as four separate critical findings. Teams see four criticals. Boards panic. In reality, there's one action update Chrome. The noise generated by poorly configured tools inflates urgency and slows down the teams trying to respond.
    "People can get so overwhelmed and go, there's so much to do here, it's going to be impossible. But it's about putting a system and structure in place to deal with it. It doesn't matter whether it's one vulnerability or a thousand; it's the same process."
    A healthcare client Spence worked with had a board furious at the IT team over the volume of critical vulnerabilities appearing in reports. The team hadn't done anything wrong. They'd simply never run structured vulnerability management before, so when they started, everything surfaced at once. The fix wasn't faster patching, it was building a process: identify assets, prioritise by actual business risk, remediate in order, track progress. Once the board understood they were closing gaps rather than chasing an impossible zero, the relationship between leadership and the security team stabilised.
    Patch management isn't a solved problem. For businesses running tens of thousands of endpoints with hundreds of applications across their estate, keeping up with remediation at scale is genuinely hard. AI-driven discovery doesn't solve that it amplifies the pressure if there's no management system underneath it.
    How to Evaluate AI Security Claims
    Given the pace of AI development and the volume of vendor claims, security leaders need a practical filter. Spence's is straightforward with his sentiments like does this address a specific outcome your organisation has already identified as a gap?
    Not "does this solve the broad threat category of AI-driven attacks." Not "does this give us AI-powered detection." But specifically, does this map to something we know we need to fix in our environment?
    The same filter applies to internal AI adoption. Two questions should come before anything else: what business risk are you accepting by giving AI agents access to your data, and is that access read-only, or can the agent execute actions? The risk profile of those two scenarios is dramatically different, and most organisations haven't explicitly defined which one they're operating under.
    What Security Leaders Should Do Differently
    The practical takeaways from Spence's position are less about new tools and more about clearer thinking:
    Lead with outcomes, not products. Define what your organisation needs to achieve before engaging with any vendor. Map tools to outcomes, not the other way around.
    Treat vulnerability volume as noise, not signal. Build a prioritisation and remediation process. A thousand vulnerabilities managed systematically is less dangerous than ten vulnerabilities with no process behind them.
    Ask the data access question first. Before any AI deployment, define what it can access and whether it can act on that access. That decision shapes your entire risk profile.
    Consolidate rather than accumulate. The industry is moving toward fewer, better-integrated tools for good reason. Thirty security products that no one fully configures is not a security strategy.
    Stay on the fundamentals. AI hasn't invalidated the NCSC's core steps. If anything, AI-driven threats make...
  • The Security Strategist

    How the Mythos Era Is Reshaping the Future of the SOC

    2026/06/15 | 27 mins.
    Security operations centres have always been a numbers game with too many alerts, few analysts, and never enough hours in a shift. But something has changed. The arrival of AI models capable of identifying vulnerabilities and generating working exploits at machine speed has quietly shifted the terms of engagement between attackers and defenders. In this episode of the Security Strategist podcast, Richard Stiennon sits down with Edward Wu, founder and CEO of Dropzone AI, to unpack what the Mythos era actually means for the SOC and what defenders need to do about it right now.
    The Alert Problem That AI Was Always Going to Solve
    Wu didn't come to this conversation theoretically. Before founding Dropzone AI, he spent eight years at Palo Alto Networks building AI and machine learning detection products, systems that generated millions of security alerts. The conclusion he walked away with was that most security teams don't need another alert cannon. What they need is help processing the ones they already have.
    That insight shaped everything about Dropzone's approach. The problem in most SOCs isn't a lack of signals, but it's analytical capacity. SIEMs stack-rank alerts by criticality, which sounds helpful until you realise that even a well-tuned system routinely surfaces 150 critical alerts per shift. No team handles that volume consistently. The alerts at the bottom of the queue, the ones that often contain the earliest indicators of a breach, simply never get looked at.
    "AI can look at 50 alerts in parallel," Wu explains, and that's not a trivial capability. It means the lows, mediums, and informational alerts that security teams have historically deprioritised out of necessity can finally get attention. Several of Dropzone's customers have gone further; they've actually reversed years of detection tuning alerts that were switched off because they were deemed too noisy, because AI augmentation means the team now has the capacity to handle the volume. The aperture widens. Coverage improves, and holes in the detection fabric get closed rather than quietly accepted.
    Mythos Changed the Timeline, Not the Outcome
    When Anthropic published its findings on Mythos, the cybersecurity community took notice. Here was a model demonstrably capable of analysing code, discovering vulnerabilities, and writing working exploits with tasks that had previously required significant human expertise and time. Wu was watching closely, and his take is more measured than most of the commentary that followed.
    He wasn't surprised. Models had been trending in this direction for some time, and when researchers revisited older models with better prompt engineering after the Mythos announcement, many found comparable outputs. What Mythos represented wasn't a sudden leap into unknown territory; it was confirmation that a step-function in attacker capability had arrived, and that the timeline for impact was no longer theoretical. "It was never a question of if," Wu says. "Mythos made the answer to when very concrete within the next couple of months."
    The strategic implication is important to sit with. Vulnerability management is a slow-moving discipline with significant organisational friction. Patching schedules, competing priorities, and legacy infrastructure, these constraints don't bend quickly, regardless of how capable AI becomes on the offensive side. If attackers can now discover and weaponise vulnerabilities faster than defenders can patch them, the perimeter becomes harder to hold. Initial footholds become easier to gain.
    This shifts the weight of the entire security programme toward detection and response. Wu frames it as a change in where the statistical advantage lies. Before a breach, attackers only need to be right once. But once they're inside, the math flips. On average, an attacker needs to make seven to ten moves to reach their objective. Detection and response teams have multiple opportunities to catch them, if the tripwires are sensitive enough, and if someone is actually paying attention to them.
    Fighting AI with AI
    The phrase "fighting AI with AI" risks sounding abstract. Wu brings it back to operational reality. The most immediate application is alert investigation, still the most labour-intensive function in any detection and response team. AI agents can begin processing an alert within seconds of it being created. Mean time to response drops. Mean time to disposition drops. The window of opportunity for an attacker to move laterally, escalate privileges, or exfiltrate data gets materially smaller.
    For larger teams, this translates into improved coverage and faster response. For smaller teams, it functions as genuine force multiplication; analysts spend less time on repetitive investigation work and more time on detection engineering, threat hunting, and closing gaps in the broader security architecture.
    Wu also addresses the hallucination concern that comes up whenever AI is proposed for high-stakes environments. His answer is direct: "Hallucinations are caused by poor context engineering." Feed a model insufficient or irrelevant information, and it fills in the gaps. Feed it the right data, the specific logs, the relevant threat intelligence, and the contextual detail it needs, and it performs the analytical task accurately. The model isn't the problem. The scaffolding around it is what determines the outcome.
    For CISOs considering where to start, Wu's advice is practical. Audit where the team is actually spending its time. Identify the bottlenecks. Then evaluate vendors — at least three, in production, in your own environment, against three criteria: does the technology work now, is the company's roadmap aligned with where you're trying to get to, and can you trust the engineering team to deliver it?
    The Mythos era hasn't changed the fundamental cat-and-mouse dynamic of cybersecurity. But it has raised the stakes and raised the ceiling on what AI-augmented defence can deliver. If you want to find out more, visit Dropzone AI or connect with Edward Wu on LinkedIn.
    Takeaways
    AI models like Mythos and their capabilities
    Impact of AI on vulnerability discovery and exploit creation
    Enhancing SOC efficiency with AI augmentation

    Chapters
    00:00 Introduction to AI in Cybersecurity
    02:04 The Challenge of Alert Overload
    07:00 The Impact of Mythos on Vulnerability Management
    11:58 Detection and Response as the New Frontline
    16:27 Fighting AI with AI: Practical Implications
    22:00 Customer Experiences and Success Stories
    25:15 Preparing for Automation in SOCs
  • The Security Strategist

    Will AI Kill Policy-Based Data Security?

    2026/06/10 | 23 mins.
    Podcast: The Security Strategist
    Guest: Nitay Milner, Co-Founder & CEO at ORION Security
    Host: Richard Stiennon, Chief Research Analyst at IT Harvest, Author, and Advisor to Vendors, VCs, and Private Equity Firms
    Cybersecurity is evolving every second, and Data Loss Prevention (DLP) has become a key focus for enterprises seeking to protect sensitive data. However, traditional DLP systems often struggle to keep pace with the scale of data in motion.
    In this episode of The Security Strategist Podcast, host Richard Stiennon, Chief Research Analyst at IT Harvest, Author, and Advisor to Vendors, VCs, and Private Equity Firms, sits down with Nitay Milner, Co-Founder & CEO at ORION Security. They discuss how DLP has changed and the new dynamics of AI for data security and data security for AI.
    They explore the challenges faced by traditional DLP systems, the need for deep contextual insights in data protection, and the implications of AI as both an enabler and a risk. The conversation highlights the shift from static, policy-based approaches to dynamic, AI-driven solutions, emphasising the importance of real-time monitoring and accurate, enforceable data exfiltration prevention.
    What are the Limitations of Traditional DLP
    Traditional DLP systems have existed for decades, but they mainly aim to protect stored data. These systems rely on fixed policies and rules that usually lack the context needed for smart security decisions. According to Milner, these systems cannot effectively manage data in motion, which is where data leakage typically occurs.
    Traditional DLP notoriously generates high numbers of false positive alerts. Milner cites an alarming statistic stating that some enterprises employ as many as 60 DLP analysts just to triage these alerts, creating a bottleneck in security processes resulting in critical alerts slipping through the cracks due to unmanageable signal-to-noise ratios.
    What are the Key Challenges in Real-World Applications
    Milner shares his experiences at Cisco, where he worked with large enterprises like T-Mobile and Chevron. Even after putting traditional DLP measures in place, these enterprises continually struggled to protect their data effectively. Their challenges included the lack of real-time monitoring and an excessive focus on compliance instead of true data protection.
    AI and agentic approaches to cybersecurity are helping enterprise data security teams today win the fight against data loss. Agentic DLP can analyse data in context, understanding both the data itself and the circumstances of its movement.
    Milner notes that AI can interpret the source, destination, and nature of the data being handled. This allows AI systems to distinguish between legitimate business activities and potential data leaks. For example, if a financial analyst accesses sensitive information to complete a report, AI can identify this as a valid action rather than flagging it as suspicious.
    How is AI Impacting DLP
    A major benefit of adding AI to DLP systems is the decrease in false positives. Traditional methods often depend on deviations from set baselines, resulting in thousands of alerts lacking context. AI, particularly through Large Language Models (LLMs), can offer a better understanding, leading to smarter alerts and more efficient security responses.
    As enterprises increasingly adopt AI technologies, it becomes essential to have strong DLP systems that can incorporate AI innovations. Security professionals need to focus not only on protecting data but also on enabling the safe use of AI within enterprises.
    However, Milner spotlights the need to set guardrails around AI applications. As employees use AI tools for a variety of tasks, they can unintentionally expose sensitive information. By creating clear guidelines and monitoring systems, enterprises can keep data secure while still benefiting from AI.
    Introducing AI into business processes brings new challenges, especially regarding data exploitation. Milner cautions that as AI systems become more common, the risk of sensitive data being shared with untrusted third-party applications rises. Enterprises must be careful about what data is shared and with whom to effectively reduce these risks.
    Leveraging AI is not a question anymore; it’s how you do it that matters. Enterprises can create smarter, more efficient DLP systems that reduce noise, improve real-time data protection, and allow businesses to use AI safely. As we move into this new era of cybersecurity, the partnership between AI and DLP will be vital in protecting sensitive data.
    Key Takeaways
    Legacy DLP tools generate an overwhelming number of false positives.
    AI can provide real-time contextual understanding.
    Traditional DLP systems are not equipped for the scale or movement of modern data.
    The future of data security relies on AI-native and agentic solutions.
    Guardrails are essential for safe AI usage in enterprises.
    Real-time monitoring is crucial for effective data protection.
    Policies should be limited and focused on specific use cases.
    AI can recognise risky data patterns that traditional methods cannot.
    Data security must adapt to the rapid evolution and adoption of AI tools and agents.
    Education on new risks is vital for enterprises.

    Chapters
    00:00 The Evolution of Data Loss Prevention (DLP)
    02:54 AI's Role in Redefining Data Security
    06:12 Challenges of Traditional DLP Systems
    09:02 The Need for Contextual Understanding in DLP
    12:07 Guardrails for AI in Data Security
    15:04 Transitioning from Policies to AI-Driven Solutions
    17:54 Real-World Examples of Data Protection
    20:49 The Future of DLP and Data Security
    For more enterprise AI in cybersecurity and DLP insights, please follow Orion Security across its official channels:
    Website: ORION Security
    YouTube: @ORION-dlp
    LinkedIn: ORION Security

    For more information on enterprise tech analyst-led insights, please visit em360tech.com
    EM360Tech YouTube: @enterprisemanagement360
    EM360Tech LinkedIn: @EM360Tech
    EM360Tech X: @EM360Tech
  • The Security Strategist

    How Agentic AI Is Reshaping Cybersecurity

    2026/06/04 | 29 mins.
    Artificial intelligence has moved well beyond the chatbot era. The systems being deployed today don't just respond to questions; they plan, decide, and act. In this episode of the Security Strategist, host Trisha Pillay sits down with Kevin Curran, Professor of Cybersecurity at Ulster University and IEEE senior member, to unpack what this shift means for organisations, security teams, and the people responsible for keeping data safe. From prompt injection to privacy by design, this conversation covers the full spectrum of what agentic AI brings to the cybersecurity table and what it demands of us in return.
    From Chatbots to Autonomous Agents
    For years, AI in the enterprise context meant tools that waited for instructions. You asked, it answered. The dynamic was predictable, and security teams could build controls around it. Fast forward today, that world is rapidly becoming a memory.
    Agentic AI represents a step-change. These systems don't sit idle waiting for a prompt; they pursue goals, interact with APIs, browse the web, execute code, and coordinate with other AI agents, often with minimal human involvement. As Curran explains, this autonomy is both the point and the problem. "Our surface area has dramatically expanded," he notes, capturing in a single phrase what security architects are grappling with across industries.
    The implications are immediate. Traditional security frameworks were designed around human actors, meaning slow-moving, auditable, and accountable. Agentic systems operate at machine speed, across multiple endpoints simultaneously, and can chain together dozens of actions before a human reviewer even knows a task has begun. The perimeter, as security professionals understood it, has effectively dissolved.
    For organisations still thinking about AI security in terms of data privacy policies and acceptable use clauses, this is a wake-up call. The threat model has changed. The question is no longer just what data an AI can access, but what actions it can take and on whose behalf.
    The Vulnerabilities Nobody Warned You About
    As the capabilities of agentic AI grow, so does the attack surface. Curran highlights prompt injection as one of the most pressing and underappreciated threats in this new landscape. Unlike traditional software vulnerabilities that exploit code, prompt injection attacks exploit the AI's core function: its ability to read and follow instructions.
    The attack is deceptively simple. A malicious actor embeds hidden instructions in content that the AI will encounter, a webpage it browses, a document it processes, or an email it reads. The agent is unable to distinguish between legitimate directives and injected commands, following the hidden instruction. It might exfiltrate data, take an unauthorised action, or silently alter its behaviour. The user never knows.
    This vulnerability is particularly dangerous in agentic contexts precisely because these systems have broader permissions and longer action chains. An AI agent with access to calendars, emails, file systems, and external APIs is a high-value target. A successfully injected prompt doesn't just compromise a single response but it can compromise an entire workflow.
    The accountability question compounds the problem. As Curran puts it: "Who's responsible when AI acts autonomously?" When an AI agent makes a decision that causes harm, whether through a security breach, a compliance violation, or an erroneous action. The lines of responsibility blur in ways that existing legal and organisational frameworks aren't equipped to handle. Boards, legal teams, and CISOs need to be asking this question now, before an incident forces the issue.
    The principle of least privilege emerges here as a critical mitigation. Curran is clear that AI agents should operate with the minimum access necessary for any given task, not a blanket set of enterprise-wide permissions. Limiting scope limits damage. If a compromised agent can only touch what it needs for a specific transaction, the blast radius of any attack is contained.
    Secure by Design
    The answer to agentic AI's security challenges isn't to slow down adoption, it's to build differently. Curran is a strong advocate for the secure by design philosophy, which holds that security must be an architectural decision made at the beginning of a system's life, not a layer of controls bolted on after deployment.
    This principle has been discussed in cybersecurity circles for years, but agentic AI gives it new urgency. When you're deploying systems that make autonomous decisions, the cost of a security oversight isn't a patching cycle, it can be an incident. Designing for security from day one means conducting AI-specific threat modelling before a system goes live, mapping out what an agent can access, what actions it can take, and where the failure points lie.
    Privacy by design sits alongside this as an equally vital framework. Curran points to ephemeral transaction models as a promising approach, structures in which AI agents handle sensitive data only for the duration of a specific task, with no persistent storage of information that isn't necessary. "Privacy by design minimises data collection," he explains, and in a world where autonomous systems are constantly processing personal and organisational data, minimisation isn't just good practice. It's good governance.
    Tools and platforms are beginning to emerge that support this approach. Signing room technologies, for instance, offer ways to conduct sensitive transactions with built-in auditability and access controls, worth exploring for organisations managing AI-assisted workflows involving contracts or identity verification. Security scanning platforms designed for AI-era codebases are also maturing, giving development teams the ability to identify vulnerabilities before they reach production.
    Organisations that treat security and privacy as foundational to AI deployment, rather than compliance requirements, will be better positioned as these systems become more capable and increasingly embedded in critical operations.
    Takeaways
    Agentic AI and autonomous decision-making
    Security vulnerabilities in AI systems
    Secure by design principles for AI deployment
    Invest in AI-specific threat modeling
    Implement security by design principles from the start
    Adopt ephemeral transaction frameworks for privacy

    Chapters
    00:00 Introduction to Agentic AI and Cybersecurity
    04:07 Understanding Agentic AI and Its Implications
    09:50 The Shift from Assistive Tools to Autonomous Agents
    15:46 Emerging Threats in AI Security
    22:02 Secure by Design: Building Security into AI Systems
    27:51 Privacy by Design in Autonomous Transactions
    29:46 Conclusion and Future Outlook on AI Security
  • The Security Strategist

    The New Cyber Battlefield: AI vs AI and the Rise of Autonomous Security Systems

    2026/06/03 | 27 mins.
    The moment an organisation's board starts asking how to prepare for autonomous AI attacks, the conversation has already shifted. What used to be a theoretical briefing topic is now a line item in risk registers and a direct question landing on CISOs' desks from the C-suite.
    Shachar Hirshberg and Dan Shiebler, co-founders of Artemis Security, an AI-Native Protection Platform for security operations, in production at Mercury, Lemonade, Wix, Upwork, and some of the largest enterprises in the world, have that conversation daily.
    Artemis raised $70M in series A, led by Felicis with First Round Capital and Brightmind Partners doubling down, alongside top VCs including Theory Ventures, Lockstep, Two Sigma Ventures, and prominent cybersecurity industry leaders, including the founders of Abnormal AI and Demisto, the former CEO and CTO of Splunk, and senior executives from CrowdStrike, Palo Alto Networks, Microsoft, and Okta.
    In a recent episode of the Security Strategist Podcast with host Richard Stiennon, Hirshberg and Shiebler laid out the strategic reality with unusual clarity, not as a product pitch, but as a candid assessment of where the threat environment stands and what it demands from security leadership.
    The Economics of Attack Have Changed
    The foundation of legacy security architecture rests on an assumption that no longer holds: that launching a sophisticated, targeted attack is expensive. Acquiring intelligence on a specific organisation, crafting adaptive exploits, and manually steering a multi-stage breach required time, skill, and resources. Defenders could lean on that cost. Understand attacker behaviour, get ahead of their patterns, and you impose meaningful friction.
    Shiebler identifies this as the core structural failure of traditional approaches today.
    "AI really changes that. It's so much easier for attackers to craft new attacks, to explore different strategies, and make it much cheaper to send out radically different, really sophisticated attacks, which really means that trying to rely on approaches that involve just understanding attackers and trying to stay ahead of that is very, very challenging."
    The consequence is not simply faster attacks. It's the collapse of the distinction between opportunistic, broad-based threats and sophisticated targeted campaigns. What previously required nation-state resources or advanced persistent threat infrastructure can now be approximated by an attacker with limited technical knowledge and access to capable agentic tooling.
    The MTTR Calculation
    Hirshberg frames the urgency in operational terms. The industry benchmark for mean time to respond sits at roughly four hours. The top 0.1 per cent of security operations globally measure in minutes. The frontier measures in seconds and adversaries are already in seconds.
    "We are still talking in hours and need to bridge that gap because we will live in an era where it will have a hundred real zero days every single day in every organisation. If you're measuring your MTTR in hours and you have a hundred real attacks per day, you are fully overwhelmed with traditional tooling."
    The arithmetic is unambiguous, and no staffing model resolves it. No incremental tooling investment closes it. It requires a categorical shift in how detection, investigation, and response are architected, moving from human-executed to human-guided autonomous response.
    The Defender’s Unused Advantage
    Underneath the operational urgency Hirshberg and Shiebler describe, sits an architectural premise about how Artemis is built. In an AI era, both sides draw on the same technology. Whatever edge the defender once held in raw capability is gone. What remains, and what the attacker cannot acquire from outside, is knowledge of the defender's own environment. Who works where. What is normal for this user? Which systems matter to the business? Whether a 3 a.m. login is routine or the first in this person's history. That knowledge has always existed. What has never existed is a security platform that could assemble it, keep it continuously current, and detect against it at machine speed.
    Artemis is built around that advantage. The company calls it Environment Intelligence, and the practical effect for the security team is a qualitatively different output. Where most platforms produce alerts that an analyst then has to investigate, Artemis produces decision-grade cases: findings that arrive ready to act on.
    The Strategic Cybersecurity Imperative

    Hirshberg and Shiebler are blunt on timing, and it is the part that leaders miss. Deploying the technology is the fast part: Artemis connects in under an hour and produces real cases within 48 hours. The slow part is organisational: governance, and process maturity for a human-supervised AI to act at machine speed. That work compounds in months, not weeks. Organisations starting now will be operating in the new model when the threat tilts.
    For more information on this, visit https://artemissecurity.com/ or connect with the guests:
    Shachar Hirshberg | LinkedIn | Co-Founder and CEO Artemis
    Dan Shiebler | | Linkedln | Co-Founder and CTO Artemis
    Takeaways
    AI transforming cyber operations
    AI-driven attacks and defense
    Limitations of traditional security architectures
    How Artemis Is Shaping Autonomous Cyber Defence

    Chapters
    00:00 — The Evolving Cybersecurity Landscape
    03:40 — AI in Cyber Operations
    09:19 — Challenges of Traditional Security Architectures
    14:03 — The Future of Cyber Defence
    20:05 — Adapting to New Threats
    25:29 — Strategic Planning for CISOs
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About The Security Strategist
With cyber attacks more common than ever before and each attack becoming increasingly sophisticated, security teams need to be one step ahead of cybercrime at all times. “The Security Strategist” podcast delves into the depths of the cybercriminal underworld, revealing practical strategies to keep you one step ahead. We dissect the latest trends and threats in cybersecurity, providing insights and expect-backed solutions to protect your organisation effectively. Tune into this cybersecurity podcast as we dissect major threats, explore emerging trends, and share proven prevention strategies to fortify your defences.
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