Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Cyberwarfare / Nation-State Attacks
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Fraud Management & Cybercrime
Also: SolarWinds Case Nears Quiet Settlement; Securing Agentic AI Requires Layers
In this week’s edition, Information Security Media Group editors discussed Russia’s cyber treason arrests, a legal settlement between the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and SolarWinds and how organizations are working to secure agentic artificial intelligence.
See Also: AI vs. AI: Leveling the Defense Playing Field
The panelists – Anna Delaney, director, productions; Mathew Schwartz, executive editor, DataBreachToday and Europe; Michael Novinson, managing editor, ISMG Business; and Tom Field, senior vice president, editorial – discussed:
- Whether Russia’s arrests of alleged pro-Ukraine hackers reflect a broader campaign to project strength and control the narrative amid war losses, economic decline and tightened information control;
- The proposed SEC settlement with SolarWinds and its former CISO, exploring how the high-profile case over alleged security misrepresentations may conclude quietly amid political shifts, witness challenges and changing regulatory priorities;
- Highlights from an interview with Google’s Anton Chuvakin, which outlines how securing agentic AI demands a layered approach that combines traditional security principles such as access controls and data governance with AI-specific measures such as adversarial testing and model filtering.
The ISMG Editors’ Panel runs weekly. Don’t miss our previous installments, including the June 27 edition on AI frontier models promoting murder and the July 4 edition on how pro-Iran hackers threaten to leak Trump data.