How Underground Fiber Optics Turn Your City Into a Living Intrusion Sensor
Every city sits on a mesh of underground fiber optic cables—installed for telecom, but capable of much more. A growing number of intrusion detection t...
11 articles in this category
Every city sits on a mesh of underground fiber optic cables—installed for telecom, but capable of much more. A growing number of intrusion detection t...
Alert fatigue is not a failure of will; it is a design problem. When every new sensor or rule adds another pile of events to an already-overwhelmed qu...
Introduction: Why Traditional Alert Systems Fail in Modern EnvironmentsThroughout my career securing everything from financial institutions to special...
Every intrusion detection system generates alerts. That is the easy part. The hard part is knowing which alerts matter, when to act, and how to stop t...
Every detection team knows the feeling: another alert fires, another incident is confirmed, and the attacker has already been inside for days. Reactiv...
Alert fatigue is not a training problem. It is a structural consequence of building detection programs around signature matching and threshold-based r...
Intrusion detection in 2025 cannot rely on alert triage alone. The volume of noise, the speed of attackers, and the sophistication of evasion techniqu...
Most intrusion detection systems are built to scream. They generate alerts for every suspicious packet, every odd login, every outbound connection to ...
Why Proactive Intrusion Detection Matters Now For years, the mantra was simple: build a strong perimeter firewall, patch vulnerabilities, and hope the...
Firewalls are necessary but not sufficient. In 2024, sophisticated attackers bypass perimeter defenses through encrypted channels, supply chain compro...
Every day, networks are infiltrated silently. Attackers often dwell for weeks or months before triggering alarms, siphoning data, or deploying ransomw...