Tag: securityoperations
6 articles

Staff Burnout: Exclusive Report Reveals Critical Risks
Staff burnout is no longer a background HR issue — its a strategic threat: exhausted defenders mean slower detection, higher turnover, and wider openings for attackers. A new Security Magazine–backed report urges leaders to treat burnout as an operational vulnerability, not just a people problem.

staff burnout: Must-Have Fixes to Protect Best Defenses
Staff burnout is now the top threat to organizational security—teams are exhausted, turnover is rising, and defenders can’t keep up with smarter attacks. Fixing it means investing in people, smarter processes, and better tooling before stretched teams become the weakest link.

staff burnout: Risky Crisis, Must-Have Fixes
When the people charged with defending systems are exhausted, response slows and risk balloons — a new Security magazine-backed report finds burnout now tops leaders’ threat lists. Treating burnout as a strategic vulnerability, not an HR problem, means investing in humane workflows, smarter automation, and retention before talent drains create gaps attackers can exploit.

integrated incident response: Must-Have Best Practices
When alarms won’t stop, what counts is not the noise but how quickly your teams move from scattered alerts to coordinated action. Unifying IT, security and continuity — with shared telemetry, playbooks and rehearsed handoffs — speeds recovery, protects people and keeps trust intact.

Common Vulnerability Scoring System: Stunningly Risky Flaw
Vulnerability scores like CVSS can create a dangerous illusion of certainty — noisy, context‑blind numbers often mislead teams into patching the wrong things while real risks slip through. It’s time to pair those scores with exploit intel, asset criticality, and business impact so we prioritize what actually matters.

FortiSIEM CVE-2025-25256 Exclusive Critical Alert
Heads up: FortiSIEM CVE-2025-25256 is a critical 9.8-rated OS command injection with exploit code already in the wild, meaning exposed or unpatched instances can let attackers run commands, pivot, and erase evidence. Patch immediately, isolate affected systems, and hunt for indicators of compromise to avoid a catastrophic breach.