A penetration test (or more commonly, “pentest”) is a software, infrastructure, and or network attack on your organization by a skilled attack team that probes for security weaknesses and seeks to ...
Abstract: Penetration testing (pentesting) assesses cybersecurity through simulated attacks, while the conventional manual-based method is costly, time-consuming, and personnel-constrained.
Summary: Lovable, the $6.6 billion vibe coding platform with eight million users, has faced three documented security incidents exposing source code, database credentials, and thousands of user ...
Sanjay Barot is an aspiring tech enthusiast with a strong desire to explore the world of software engineering. Most security teams believe they're covered. They run their scans, check the compliance ...
It’s a story the security community knows well. You bring in a shiny new automated penetration testing tool, and the first "run" is a revelation. The dashboard lights up with critical findings, ...
Artificial intelligence is no longer just a lab experiment. It’s quietly becoming part of everyday software, helping developers write code, assisting analysts with research, and powering tools inside ...
Offensive security is entering a new era. Attackers are increasingly using AI to automate reconnaissance, vulnerability discovery, and exploitation. At the same time, modern development practices are ...
This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. (Editors note: The email address has been pixelated) In this photo illustration an email is ...
Ask a security lead to sketch their environment, and the rough draft likely includes multi-cloud builds, SaaS sprawl, and a few stubborn legacy boxes humming in the corner. Every new integration opens ...
Companies must reevaluate their security measures and operational stability in light of the ever-changing nature of cyber threats. When looking into resilience plans, businesses often consider tools ...
Cybersecurity in 2026 looks very different from what it did only a few years ago. Attack surfaces are larger. Cloud environments are more complex. Applications update constantly. APIs, container ...