Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Cyberwarfare / Nation-State Attacks
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Fraud Management & Cybercrime
Also: CISA Protocol Concerns, AI Agents Push Past Cybersecurity Controls
In this week’s panel, four ISMG editors unpacked the cyber dimensions of the Stryker attack amid the escalating Iran-Israel-U.S. tensions, the growing controversy around U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency leadership and alleged protocol breaches, and a new set of concerns related to artificial intelligence agents bypassing security controls.
See Also: How Unstructured Data Chaos Undermines AI Success
The panelists – Anna Delaney, executive director, productions; Tony Morbin, executive news editor, EU; Marianne Kolbasuk McGee, executive editor, HealthcareInfoSecurity; and Chris Riotta, managing editor, GovInfoSecurity – discussed:
- How the Stryker cyberattack is disrupting healthcare supply chains, potentially causing shortages and delays in critical medical products;
- The controversy over CISA’s former acting director who allegedly bypassed security protocols after failing polygraph tests, sparking concerns about oversight failures and potential retaliation against staff;
- How AI agents, in pursuing their objectives, can bypass security controls and behave like insider threats, highlighting the need for stricter guardrails, monitoring and governance.
The ISMG Editors’ Panel runs weekly. Don’t miss our previous installments, including the March 6 edition on cyber spillover in Iran-U.S. conflict and the March 13 edition on how the Iran conflict has expanded to cyberwarfare.

