The Threat Already Inside Your Building: Understanding Insider Risk in 2026
The Cyber Threat Most Organisations Overlook When businesses think about cybersecurity threats, they often picture external attackers, hackers, organised cybercriminal groups, or nation-state actors operating from thousands of miles away. While these threats remain significant, some of the most damaging security incidents in recent years have originated from inside the
Read MoreThe Clock Is Already Ticking: Why Quantum Computing Is a Cybersecurity Problem Right Now
Introduction When most people hear quantum computing, they picture something from the distant future, a technology so advanced and experimental that it barely registers as a practical concern.The reality in 2026 is far more unsettling.While a fully cryptographically relevant quantum computer may not exist yet, the attack it will eventually
Read MoreThe Silent Threat Inside Your Supply Chain: Why Third-Party Cyber Risk Is the Defining Challenge of 2026
Your organisation’s cybersecurity is no longer defined solely by your own defences. In 2026, the greatest risks often originate from suppliers, vendors, cloud providers, software dependencies, and external partners connected to your ecosystem. Supply chain cyberattacks have become one of the most dangerous and disruptive threats facing businesses today. Instead
Read MoreWhat Would You Do If Your Business Was Hacked Tomorrow?
Introduction It’s a question most business owners don’t want to dwell on: if you walked into work tomorrow and discovered your systems had been compromised overnight, what would actually happen next?For many SMEs, the honest answer is simple, chaos. Not because of negligence, but because planning for a cyberattack often
Read MoreThe Rise of AI-Powered Cyber Threats: What Organizations Need to Know in 2026
Introduction Artificial intelligence (AI) has revolutionized countless industries, and cybersecurity is no exception. Unfortunately, cybercriminals are also leveraging AI to create more effective, automated, and evasive attacks.In 2026, the use of AI in cybercrime is accelerating rapidly. From highly personalized phishing campaigns to deepfake-driven fraud, attackers are now able to
Read More