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  • ✇Security Boulevard
  • Banning Routers Won’t Secure the Internet Alan Shimel
    Washington’s push to ban foreign-made Wi-Fi routers may sound tough on cybersecurity, but like earlier bans on foreign drones and telecom gear it risks becoming security theater that ignores the real problem: Millions of unpatched devices already sitting on American networks. The post Banning Routers Won’t Secure the Internet appeared first on Security Boulevard.
     

Banning Routers Won’t Secure the Internet

6 de Abril de 2026, 06:53

Washington’s push to ban foreign-made Wi-Fi routers may sound tough on cybersecurity, but like earlier bans on foreign drones and telecom gear it risks becoming security theater that ignores the real problem: Millions of unpatched devices already sitting on American networks.

The post Banning Routers Won’t Secure the Internet appeared first on Security Boulevard.

  • ✇Security Boulevard
  • 112 or 22 to 2: Who Moved the Vulnerability Cheese? Alan Shimel
    AI can now scan codebases and generate hundreds of potential vulnerabilities in minutes. But when 112 bug reports collapse into 22 confirmed flaws and only two exploitable issues, the real disruption is how AI is reshaping the entire vulnerability lifecycle. The post 112 or 22 to 2: Who Moved the Vulnerability Cheese? appeared first on Security Boulevard.
     
  • ✇Security Boulevard
  • Things Were Even Worse at CISA Than We Thought Alan Shimel
    Just last week I wrote that CISA was on life support. That was before we knew how bad it really was. When Jen Easterly stepped down and the agency was left without a Senate-confirmed director, it was already troubling. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency — the nerve center for defending federal networks and coordinating.. The post Things Were Even Worse at CISA Than We Thought appeared first on Security Boulevard.
     

Things Were Even Worse at CISA Than We Thought

28 de Fevereiro de 2026, 12:57

Just last week I wrote that CISA was on life support. That was before we knew how bad it really was. When Jen Easterly stepped down and the agency was left without a Senate-confirmed director, it was already troubling. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency — the nerve center for defending federal networks and coordinating..

The post Things Were Even Worse at CISA Than We Thought appeared first on Security Boulevard.

  • ✇Security Boulevard
  • CISA on Life Support Alan Shimel
    The latest shutdown may be temporary, but the damage at CISA is not. Staffing cuts, stalled leadership and political crossfire have hollowed out what was once a bright spot in federal cybersecurity. When institutions built on trust and coordination lose people and mission clarity, the risks extend far beyond Washington. The post CISA on Life Support appeared first on Security Boulevard.
     

CISA on Life Support

24 de Fevereiro de 2026, 07:18

The latest shutdown may be temporary, but the damage at CISA is not. Staffing cuts, stalled leadership and political crossfire have hollowed out what was once a bright spot in federal cybersecurity. When institutions built on trust and coordination lose people and mission clarity, the risks extend far beyond Washington.

The post CISA on Life Support appeared first on Security Boulevard.

  • ✇Security Boulevard
  • When AI Knows Something is Wrong, But No One is Accountable Alan Shimel
    When AI systems detect violent intent but private companies decide whether it’s “imminent enough” to alert authorities, we are operating inside a regulatory void. A recent Canadian tragedy exposes the uncomfortable reality that tech platforms are quietly acting as risk arbiters without shared standards, transparency or public oversight. The question isn’t whether monitoring exists. It’s who governs it. The post When AI Knows Something is Wrong, But No One is Accountable appeared first on Securi
     

When AI Knows Something is Wrong, But No One is Accountable

23 de Fevereiro de 2026, 08:25

When AI systems detect violent intent but private companies decide whether it’s “imminent enough” to alert authorities, we are operating inside a regulatory void. A recent Canadian tragedy exposes the uncomfortable reality that tech platforms are quietly acting as risk arbiters without shared standards, transparency or public oversight. The question isn’t whether monitoring exists. It’s who governs it.

The post When AI Knows Something is Wrong, But No One is Accountable appeared first on Security Boulevard.

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