The Credential Problem: Why What We're Relying On to Stay Secure Is Already Broken
Defence, IoT, IAM, Industrial Jen Ross Defence, IoT, IAM, Industrial Jen Ross

The Credential Problem: Why What We're Relying On to Stay Secure Is Already Broken

Authentication is the front door to every system you own. And for most organizations, that door is held shut with a combination lock that a reasonably motivated teenager could crack. Not because the people managing it are careless. Because the underlying architecture was never built to handle what the threat landscape has become.

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Quantum Resistant Cryptography
Defence, IoT, IAM, Industrial Zubair Quraishi Defence, IoT, IAM, Industrial Zubair Quraishi

Quantum Resistant Cryptography

Quantum computing changes the security planning horizon. Cryptographic methods that are acceptable today may become exposed as quantum capability matures, particularly where systems still rely on RSA, ECC, long-term certificates, or other trust artifacts rooted in mathematical problems that quantum algorithms are expected to weaken.

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Securing Future Battlespaces
Defence, IoT, IAM, Industrial Jen Ross Defence, IoT, IAM, Industrial Jen Ross

Securing Future Battlespaces

Modern military operations now extend across land, sea, air, space, and cyberspace. The future battlespace will be defined by contested communications, autonomous systems, distributed sensors, AI-enabled decision support, coalition interoperability, and adversaries operating at machine speed.

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Zero Trust by Design and Default
Jen Ross Jen Ross

Zero Trust by Design and Default

Zero Trust has become a critical strategy for protecting networks, devices, applications, and data in an increasingly complex cybersecurity environment. But in practice, many Zero Trust programs still require multiple products, extensive configuration, and layers of policy wrapped around legacy trust assumptions.

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kin vs. Credential-Based Authentication
Zubair Quraishi Zubair Quraishi

kin vs. Credential-Based Authentication

Most digital security architectures still begin with a familiar assumption: if an entity can present the right credential, it can be treated as trusted. That credential may be a password, certificate, static key, token, bearer credential, or identity assertion issued by a central authority.

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The Credential Problem:
Jen Ross Jen Ross

The Credential Problem:

Authentication is the front door to every system you own. And for most organizations, that door is held shut with a combination lock that a reasonably motivated teenager could crack. Not because the people managing it are careless. Because the underlying architecture was never built to handle what the threat landscape has become.

Read More