2026-01-15 06:57:17
In tech, a managerial offer is often treated as the ultimate promotion. For some people, refusing the chance to grow hierarchically sounds strange, even irrational. But for me, there was more to consider than hierarchy.
2026-01-15 06:49:14
The Seeing Power Project is a web-based face tracking. It uses camera and canvas layering. It's an easy question to run directly in a web browser. Anyone can try it and use it.
2026-01-15 05:58:24
New York, NY, January 14th, 2026/CyberNewsWire/--Panorays, a leading provider of third-party security risk management software, has released the 2026 edition of its annual CISO Survey for Third-Party Cyber Risk Management.
The survey highlights third-party cyber risk as one of the most critical challenges facing security leaders today, driven largely by a lack of visibility. While 60% of CISOs report an increase in third-party security incidents, only 15% say they have full visibility into those risks.
These gaps are compounded by limited resources and technology stacks that weren’t designed to manage dynamic supply-chain threats at scale.
Drawing on responses from 200 CISOs of US-based companies, the 2026 Panorays CISO Survey puts a spotlight on cybersecurity executives’ continuing challenges to shore up software supply chain security, as these efforts are further undermined by resource constraints and tech stacks that fall short.
Despite growing adoption, standard Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) platforms have largely failed security teams, leaving them without the ability or confidence needed to effectively address the rising tide of third-party threats.
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Left to right: Panorays Co-founders Meir Antar (COO), Matan Or-El (CEO) and Demi Ben-Ari (Chief Strategy Officer)
“Our findings show that third-party security vulnerabilities aren’t going away – in fact, they’re becoming more prevalent due to a dangerous lack of visibility and the rampant adoption of unmanaged AI tools,” said Matan Or-El, founder and CEO of Panorays. “Meanwhile, it’s especially alarming that only 15% of CISOs say they have the ability to map out their entire supply chains.”
“The rise of AI has only made supply chains more complex, and the connected nature of these data-dependent systems is expanding the attack surface,” Or-El continued. “CISOs are increasingly seeing the value of AI-driven solutions to increase clarity around the evolving threat landscape.”
Visibility Is Being Prioritized, but CISOs’ Hands Remain Tied
The new report found there’s a growing sense of urgency among CISOs due to the failure of traditional GRC platforms to manage third-party risk at scale. Almost two-thirds of organizations have invested in GRC tools, up from just 27% in the 2025 version of Panorays’ report, yet overall visibility has declined, resulting in growing dissatisfaction about the ineffectiveness of these systems.
Fortunately, there are signs that organizations can close the visibility gap as more CISOs explore the use of advanced, AI-driven tools to improve their security posture. Adoption of AI for third-party risk management has surged, up from 27% a year ago to 66% this year.
This shift has led to significant, but still alarmingly insufficient, growth in the ability of organizations to properly assess the third-party threat landscape.
The 2026 survey found that 15% of CISOs now say they have full visibility into their software supply chains, up from just 3% a year ago, but much work remains to be done. While the progress is encouraging, the overall picture remains bleak, as 85% of organizations still lack a complete view of their overall threat landscape.
The 2026 CISO Survey was conducted in October 2025 by the independent research company Global Surveyz on behalf of Panorays. It’s based on responses from 200 Chief Information Security Officers, all of whom are full-time employees tasked with overseeing third-party cybersecurity risk management within their organizations. The sample included CISOs from the finance, insurance, professional services, technology, healthcare and software development sectors.
Panorays is a global provider of third-party cybersecurity management software. Adopted by leading banking, insurance, financial services, and healthcare organizations, Panorays enables businesses to optimize their defenses for each unique third-party relationship.
With personalized and adaptive third-party cyber risk management, Panorays helps businesses stay ahead of emerging threats and delivers actionable remediations with strategic advantages with over 1,000 customers worldwide.
The company serves enterprise and mid-market customers primarily in North America, the UK and the EU, Headquartered in New York and Israel, with offices around the world, Panorays is funded by numerous international investors, including Aleph VC, Oak HC/FT, Greenfield Partners, BlueRed Partners (Singapore), StepStone Group, Moneta VC, Imperva Co-Founder Amichai Shulman and former CEO of Palo Alto Networks Lane Bess. For more information, users can visit panorays.com or contact at [email protected].
PR
Dan Edelstein
InboundJunction
:::tip This story was published as a press release by Cybernewswire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program. Do Your Own Research before making any financial decision.
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2026-01-15 05:39:56
Austin, TX / USA, January 14th, 2026/CyberNewsWire/--New monitoring capability delivers unprecedented visibility into vendor identity exposures, moving enterprises and government agencies from static risk scoring to protecting against actual identity threats.
SpyCloud, the leader in identity threat protection, today announced the launch of its Supply Chain Threat Protection solution, an advanced layer of defense that expands identity threat protection across the extended workforce, including organizations’ entire vendor ecosystems.
Unlike traditional third-party risk management platforms that rely on external surface indicators and static scoring, SpyCloud Supply Chain Threat Protection provides timely access to identity threats derived from billions of recaptured breach, malware, phished, and combolist data assets, empowering organizations – from enterprise security teams to public sector agencies – to act on credible threats rather than simply observe and accept risk.
Supply Chain Threat Protection addresses a critical gap in enterprise security: the inability to maintain real-time awareness of identity exposures affecting third-party partners and vendors.
According to the 2025 Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report, third-party involvement in breaches doubled year-over-year, jumping from 15% to 30% primarily due to software vulnerabilities and weak security practices.
As supply chain compromises continue to escalate, security teams need intelligence that goes beyond questionnaires and external scans to reveal active threats like phishing campaigns targeting their trusted partners, confirmed credential theft, and malware-infected devices exposing critical business applications to criminals.

\ For government agencies and critical infrastructure operators, supply chain threats present national security risks that demand heightened vigilance.
Public sector organizations managing sensitive data and critical services increasingly rely on contractors and technology vendors whose compromised credentials could provide adversaries with pathways into classified systems or essential infrastructure.
Last year alone, the top 98 Defense Industrial Base suppliers had over 11,000 dark web exposed credentials – an 81% increase from the previous year. SpyCloud Supply Chain Threat Protection enables federal, state, and local agencies to identify when suppliers or contractors have been compromised – allowing them to take proactive measures before an identity exposure escalates into a matter of national security.
"Third-party threats have evolved far beyond what traditional vendor assessment tools can detect," said Damon Fleury, Chief Product Officer at SpyCloud.
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"Public and private sector organizations need to know when their vendors' employees are actively compromised by malware or phishes, when authentication data is circulating on the dark web, and which partners pose the greatest real downstream threat to their business. Our new solution delivers those signals by transforming raw underground data into clear, prioritized actions that security teams use to protect their organization."
Supply Chain Threat Protection enables organizations and agencies to continuously monitor thousands of suppliers, with each company's threats enumerated in detail, and also represented in an at-a-glance Identity Threat Index. The Index is a comprehensive and continuously updated analysis that quantifies vendor security posture through the lens of identity exposure, from both active and historical phishing, breach, and malware sources, and surfaces which partners pose the most significant risk based on verified dark web intelligence.
SpyCloud Supply Chain Threat Protection is designed to support multiple use cases across Security Operations, Infosec, Vendor Risk Management, and GRC teams. Organizations can leverage the solution for vendor due diligence during procurement and onboarding, continuous risk reviews to strengthen vendor relationships, and accelerated incident response when vendor exposures threaten their own environments.
"Security teams and their counterparts across the business are overwhelmed with vendor assessments, questionnaires, and risk scores that often don't translate to real prevention," said Alex Greer, Group Product Manager at SpyCloud.
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“Our customers have often reported that when they’re evaluating doing business with a new vendor, they lack the actionable data their legal and compliance teams need for evidence-based decision making. That’s where SpyCloud stands out. Surfacing verified identity threats tied directly to vendor compromise, letting teams escalate to leadership when to restrict data access and prioritize efforts for the greatest impact on reducing organizational risk."
Unlike existing solutions that rely on external surface indicators and static scoring, SpyCloud provides threat data derived from underground sources – the same recaptured darknet identity data that criminals actively use to target organizations and agencies. This fundamental difference enables SpyCloud customers to move from passive risk acceptance to proactive and holistic identity threat protection.
To learn more about defending organizations from the exposures of vendors and suppliers, registration is open for SpyCloud’s upcoming Live Virtual Event, Beyond Vendor Risk Scores: How to Solve the Hidden Identity Crisis in Your Supply Chain, on Thursday, January 22, 2026, at 11 am CT.
SpyCloud transforms recaptured darknet data to disrupt cybercrime. Its automated identity threat protection solutions leverage advanced analytics and AI to proactively prevent ransomware and account takeover, detect insider threats, safeguard employee and consumer identities, and accelerate cybercrime investigations.
SpyCloud's data from breaches, malware-infected devices, and successful phishes also powers many popular dark web monitoring and identity theft protection offerings. Customers include seven of the Fortune 10, along with hundreds of global enterprises, mid-sized companies, and government agencies worldwide.
Headquartered in Austin, TX, SpyCloud is home to more than 200 cybersecurity experts whose mission is to protect businesses and consumers from the stolen identity data criminals are using to target them now.
To learn more and see insights on your company's exposed data, users can visit spycloud.com.
Media Specialist
Phil Tortora
REQ on behalf of SpyCloud
:::tip This story was published as a press release by Cybernewswire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program. Do Your Own Research before making any financial decision.
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2026-01-15 05:32:17
Language models hallucinate; payment ledgers cannot. This article defines the 'Idempotency Paradox' in Agentic Commerce and introduces 'Semantic Idempotency'—a stateful architectural pattern to stop AI agents from accidentally draining user funds
2026-01-15 05:23:53
We are entering the "Agentic Infrastructure Arms Race," where the traditional e-commerce interface is dissolving and merchants must stop optimizing for human eyeballs and start optimizing for machines. This article argues that we are shifting from a web of "aggregated traffic" to one of "aggregated intent," where the winner isn't the smartest Large Language Model, but the platform that solves the critical "Trust" layer of identity and execution.