2026-04-22 17:18:08
New York, United States, April 21st, 2026/CyberNewswire/--BreachLock, a global leader in offensive security, today announced it has been named a representative vendor in the 2026 Gartner Market Guide for Adversarial Exposure Validation.
This recognition marks the first time BreachLock has been identified in the Adversarial Exposure Validation (AEV) category since launching its agentic AI-powered Adversarial Exposure Validation platform in 2025. Not only has the company gained recognition in the AEV market quickly, but BreachLock has also emerged as the only vendor offering adversarial exposure validation, Penetration Testing as a Service (PTaaS), and Continuous Attack Surface Management (CTEM) within one unified platform.
Gartner defines adversarial exposure validation as "technologies that deliver consistent, continuous, and automated evidence of the feasibility of an attack," identifying it as a key enabler of continuous threat exposure management programs.
"There is no other agentic offensive security solution on the market backed by the depth of real-world data and enterprise validation that BreachLock brings,” expressed Seemant Sehgal, Founder & CEO of BreachLock. “Seven years of proven production safety backed by over 40,000 engagements and the trust of a growing base of Fortune 100 clients is what sets us apart. This recognition is a clear reflection of that.”
Where many vendors offer adversarial exposure validation as a standalone tool, BreachLock delivers it alongside PTaaS and CTEM, which allows security teams to move from discovery and prioritization to validation to expert-led testing within a consolidated platform and single vendor. BreachLock is one of the first vendors to offer autonomous penetration testing for both network and web environments, and it's worth noting that the platform deploys agentlessly with no hardware or complex setup required.
BreachLock's autonomous penetration testing capabilities are powered by agentic AI trained on tens of thousands of real-world penetration tests and are proven to autonomously execute penetration tests at a senior penetration tester level. BreachLock AEV emulates real-world adversaries safely across an organization's live environment, mapping findings to the MITRE ATT&CK framework and, where authorized, moves laterally to and actively exploits vulnerabilities.
This takes understanding risk to a new level, proving exploitability rather than simply flagging theoretical risk. This benefits enterprise security teams substantially, helping them focus their remediation efforts and allocate resources where they matter most.
For organizations determined to scale their offensive security testing capabilities both autonomously and with human expertise, BreachLock's in-house penetration testers are available to conduct deeper investigations, manual assessments, and compliance-driven engagements through its PTaaS offering.
BreachLock is a global leader in offensive security, delivering scalable and continuous security testing. Trusted by global enterprises, BreachLock provides human-led and AI-powered attack surface management, penetration testing as a service, red teaming, and adversarial exposure validation solutions that help security teams stay ahead of adversaries. With a mission to make proactive security the new standard, BreachLock is shaping the future of cybersecurity through automation, data-driven intelligence, and expert-driven execution.
Disclaimer: Gartner does not endorse any company, vendor, product or service depicted in its publications, and does not advise technology users to select only those vendors with the highest ratings or other designation. Gartner publications consist of the opinions of Gartner's business and technology insights organization and should not be construed as statements of fact. Gartner disclaims all warranties, expressed or implied, with respect to this publication, including any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
GARTNER is a registered trademark of Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates.
Marketing Communications Manager
Megan Charrois
BreachLock
:::tip This story was published as a press release by Cybernewswire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program
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Disclaimer:
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Cryptocurrencies are speculative, complex, and involve high risks. This can mean high prices volatility and potential loss of your initial investment. You should consider your financial situation, investment purposes, and consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions. The HackerNoon editorial team has only verified the story for grammatical accuracy and does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of the information stated in this article. #DYOR
2026-04-22 17:00:53
A Unified Namespace (UNS) gives every sensor, actuator, and PLC a path in a shared ISA-95 hierarchy. Data from every facility flows into one namespace, whether the transport is MQTT, OPC UA, or Kafka. The structure problem? Solved.
But structure alone doesn’t make those paths queryable. Once you store millions of timestamped values in a dedicated time-series database, the tag_id in each row is just a reference, and the hierarchy that gives it meaning lives somewhere else. Every contextual question ("which presses across all sites ran the most?") becomes a cross-system integration problem, stitching readings from one store to the equipment context in another.
That's where the choice of database matters. When time-series data and equipment context share the same PostgreSQL instance, contextualization is a single SQL query, not an integration project.
This article walks through that architecture using a fictional company, ACME Manufacturing, with assembly lines and presses in Detroit and Munich. The examples use MQTT as the transport layer, but the schema patterns apply regardless of protocol.
Most UNS deployments split time-series storage from the equipment context. If your readings sit in InfluxDB and your hierarchy lives in a separate relational store, every contextual query requires two systems: one to pull the readings, another to resolve what generated them. Application code stitches the results together. It works, but it doesn’t scale to the queries that make an UNS operationally useful.
PostgreSQL with TimescaleDB closes that gap. Because both datasets share a query planner, the database doesn't just join them; it enforces data quality and resolves the full hierarchy at query time. No middleware, no cross-system stitching.
That advantage compounds fast. Consider a manufacturer with presses distributed across multiple sites. Each press reports a cycle counter to a UNS path like acme/detroit/assembly/line_01/press_01/press_cycles. Want to know which presses ran the most in the last 24 hours, grouped by site and line? One query. Want an AI agent to understand what a “press” is and answer questions about press performance in plain English? That works too, because the relational schema encodes the concept. The database knows what a press is, where it sits in the hierarchy, and what its readings mean.
That capability rests on a specific set of PostgreSQL features that enforce data quality at the schema level, before any application code runs.
The schema needs two tables. Start with uns_namespace, which maps the full ISA-95 hierarchy from enterprise down to individual measurement point:
CREATE TABLE uns_namespace (
id INT GENERATED ALWAYS AS IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY,
enterprise TEXT NOT NULL,
site TEXT NOT NULL,
area TEXT NOT NULL,
line TEXT NOT NULL,
cell TEXT NOT NULL,
tag_name TEXT NOT NULL,
uns_path TEXT GENERATED ALWAYS AS (
enterprise || '/' || site || '/' || area || '/' || line || '/' || cell || '/' || tag_name
) STORED,
schema_version TEXT NOT NULL DEFAULT 'v1',
description TEXT,
UNIQUE (enterprise, site, area, line, cell, tag_name)
);
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX idx_uns_namespace_path ON uns_namespace (uns_path);
Six columns follow the hierarchy: enterprise, site, area, line, cell, tag_name. uns_path is a generated column that assembles the full UNS path automatically. No application constructs it ad hoc, and no two sites can drift on the format.
With the hierarchy in place, tag_history stores the time-series readings that reference it:
CREATE TABLE tag_history (
ts TIMESTAMPTZ NOT NULL,
tag_id INT NOT NULL REFERENCES uns_namespace (id),
value DOUBLE PRECISION NOT NULL
);
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX idx_tag_history_dedup
ON tag_history (ts, tag_id);
SELECT create_hypertable('tag_history', 'ts', chunk_time_interval => INTERVAL '1 day');
The schema is deliberately minimal:
TIMESTAMPTZ enforces timezone-aware timestamps at the column level.ts stores event time (when the reading occurred at the device), not ingestion time.(ts, tag_id) deduplicates retries at insert time (ON CONFLICT DO NOTHING).Under the hood, create_hypertable turns this table into a TimescaleDB hypertable that partitions automatically by time. In production, continuous aggregates handle incremental rollups without full-table scans. For tuning chunk intervals and compression in manufacturing workloads, see Building a Data Pipeline and Optimizing for High-Volume Production Data.
The foreign key from tag_history.tag_id to uns_namespace.id is where PostgreSQL earns its keep. Every reading must point to a valid namespace entry, or the insert is rejected. Combined with TIMESTAMPTZ, NOT NULL constraints, and the dedup index, the database enforces data quality at the schema level, before any application code runs. You've probably tried enforcing these standards in your ingest code, naming-convention wikis, and spreadsheets. Those work until a commissioning team goes offline or a firmware update changes the payload structure. Database-layer enforcement doesn't care who wrote the code.
Other time-series databases handle storage well, but relational enforcement is what PostgreSQL was built for. TimescaleDB runs on PostgreSQL, so you get both time-series performance and relational integrity in one system.
Because tag_id references uns_namespace directly, a single JOIN contextualizes any reading with its full position in the plant hierarchy:
SELECT
ns.site,
ns.area,
ns.line,
ns.cell,
ns.tag_name,
th.ts,
th.value
FROM tag_history th
JOIN uns_namespace ns ON ns.id = th.tag_id
WHERE th.ts > NOW() - INTERVAL '1 hour';
That’s the core pattern. Every row comes back with what happened, when, and where in the physical plant it happened. No application reconstructs the hierarchy; the database resolves it at query time.
Now, for the question we posed earlier. ACME runs stamping presses across both sites. Each press reports a cycle counter (registered as tag_name = 'press_cycles' in the namespace) that increments with every firing. A shift supervisor pulls up the terminal: which presses ran the most in the past 24 hours, and where are they?
SELECT
ns.site,
ns.area,
ns.line,
ns.cell AS equipment,
MAX(th.value) - MIN(th.value) AS press_cycles
FROM tag_history th
JOIN uns_namespace ns ON ns.id = th.tag_id
WHERE ns.cell LIKE 'press%'
AND ns.tag_name = 'press_cycles'
AND th.ts > NOW() - INTERVAL '1 day'
GROUP BY ns.site, ns.area, ns.line, ns.cell
ORDER BY press_cycles DESC;
PostgreSQL handles the filtering, the JOIN, and the grouped aggregation in a single pass:
| site | area | line | equipment | presscycles | |----|----|----|----|----| | detroit | assembly | line01 | press01 | 847 | | munich | assembly | line01 | press01 | 812 | | detroit | assembly | line02 | press01 | 780 | | detroit | assembly | line01 | press02 | 743 | | munich | assembly | line02 | press01 | 695 | | munich | assembly | line01 | press_02 | 641 |
Every row answers three questions at once: what happened (cycle count), where (site, area, line), and what equipment (the specific press). That’s the difference between storing time-series data and contextualizing it.
Start with PostgreSQL. Put uns_namespace in place first: this table encodes the hierarchy before any sensor publishes. Add TIMESTAMPTZ, NOT NULL constraints, and the dedup indexes as your ingestion pipeline stabilizes.
A UNS gives every tag a path. PostgreSQL gives that path a home next to the data it describes. One database, one query planner, one place where time-series readings and relational context meet. That same JOIN pattern scales to cross-domain questions: add a work_orders table sourced from your ERP, and a single query returns sensor averages and maintenance holds for a specific production order, all resolved through uns_namespace.
This is where AI agents change the equation. An agent doesn't need to know how the data was cleaned or where the hierarchy came from. It queries the schema and gets trustworthy, contextualized answers because the enforcement already happened at insert time. The relational table is the equipment model, and it lives next to the data it describes. No separate registry, no config file, no lookup service.
MCP (Model Context Protocol) formalizes this pattern: an open standard for connecting AI agents to external data sources. A PostgreSQL schema with consistent vocabulary, clean hierarchies, and enforced constraints is exactly the data layer an MCP server needs. One connection, one schema that already encodes everything the agent requires.
Every query you write from here (shift reports, press utilization, AI agent lookups, digital twin synchronization) benefits from that single decision. That's the difference between a namespace and a system you can actually ask questions of.
2026-04-22 16:30:33
The integration of artificial intelligence into financial services represents an operational shift for banking institutions operating across global markets. Industry implementation accelerates as financial firms utilize Generative AI to adjust user experiences across digital channels. This transition from touch-based interfaces to conversational frameworks requires oversight of system performance, rigorous security protocols, and secure data handling capabilities.
Amar Kant Jha, a Lead Software Engineer with over fourteen years of experience in mobile application architecture, focuses extensively on developing iOS and Android solutions for large banking organizations. Having led development teams, he manages integrations involving internal/external transfers, mobile check deposits, mobile wallet, voice assistance, digital cards, and push notification systems.

As financial entities move toward voice-assisted banking models, his architectural approach addresses the necessity of balancing localized edge computing capabilities with highly scalable cloud infrastructure.
The introduction of voice AI in financial applications addresses the operational density that accumulates as mobile platforms expand to include loans, investments, and fraud alerts. Rather than navigating visual menus, customers utilize a system that fulfills financial intentions without interface friction. Jha states, "The real challenge was reducing friction in high-frequency financial tasks that users often find repetitive, slow, and cognitively demanding."
This operational pivot becomes an industry standard as financial institutions address market expansion, with the global sector projected to grow from $9.4 billion in 2022 to $26.6 billion by 2027. Conversational frameworks process structured banking data to deliver contextual interpretations rather than merely displaying raw account numbers. Jha explains, "Voice becomes valuable when the goal shifts from navigation to intent fulfillment."
Financial institutions adapt to this interaction model by focusing on proactive contextual assistance for consumer banking tasks. The implementation of Generative AI helps manage complex customer interactions efficiently while reducing the operational load on traditional human support channels. This approach enables financial platforms to deliver precise intent-based responses while comprehensively streamlining the digital user experience.
Deploying voice capabilities securely within regulated banking environments necessitates a structural division between immediate local device perception and authoritative cloud reasoning. Privacy-sensitive data processing operates natively on the edge to protect user inputs, while complex policy evaluations and transaction execution protocols run securely within backend systems. Jha notes, "The most robust architecture is therefore hybrid: privacy-sensitive, latency-critical perception runs on-device, while high-context reasoning, policy evaluation, fraud controls, and transaction orchestration execute in the cloud."
Managing complex data synchronization and connectivity drops in distributed systems requires robust offline-capable event-handling protocols to prevent financial errors. Enterprise architectures often persist workflow state and metadata natively to support long-running financial processes regardless of the user's immediate cellular network availability. By relying on controlled outbox patterns and asynchronous background syncs, consumer applications maintain vital offline capabilities without risking duplicate transactions.
Maintaining exactly-once processing semantics remains a critical requirement for any regulated financial ledger system responsible for moving real currency. Infrastructure designs must guarantee that the authoritative backend achieves exactly-once delivery utilizing transactional APIs for monetary commands initiated via voice interfaces. Jha emphasizes, "A banking app should never let the mobile device become the financial source of truth for: ledger mutation, settlement state, card state, payment finality."

Conversational voice interfaces introduce unique security vulnerabilities to the banking ecosystem, as spoken commands can be maliciously intercepted or generated synthetically. A secure enterprise deployment relies on layered cryptographic controls and hardware device binding rather than treating recognized speech as definitive proof of user identity. Jha asserts, "The foundational design decision is: Do not use voiceprint or recognized speech as the primary authenticator for financial execution."
Data protection techniques are evolving alongside these mobile interfaces to secure highly sensitive transaction payloads while they remain in transit. Hardware advancements and algorithmic innovations have reduced the Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE) compute penalty, enabling faster processing of confidential financial instructions without requiring intermediate decryption. The security sector expands in response to these evolving threats, with the global privacy software market projected to reach $3.2 billion by 2033 as institutions prioritize data security.
To finalize high-risk financial commands, banking systems must require explicit biometric validation that is cryptographically bound to a hardware key for user authentication. Financial entities implementing these stringent authentication measures can leverage CUDA-based GPU acceleration to accelerate symmetric encryption by up to 119.91 times without exposing user credentials to external network interceptors. Jha concludes, "Every high-value voice command must be signed by a device-bound private key stored in hardware-backed secure storage."
\

Complex voice interactions in modern banking applications must seamlessly accommodate diverse user demographics, specifically including those individuals with limited financial literacy. Relying exclusively on rigid audio prompts can easily create overwhelming cognitive overload and quickly trap highly vulnerable users in frustrating, fundamentally inaccessible error recovery loops. Jha advises, "The most effective design is therefore not voice-only, but multimodal and failure-aware."
A practical approach integrates spoken commands directly with visual interface confirmations and accessible manual touchscreen override options. Deploying lightweight edge processing tools reduces communication burdens and preserves bandwidth, ensuring smooth operation even in constrained or fluctuating network environments. This multimodal combination guarantees that everyday users can confidently verify their pending transactions visually before providing final authorization.
Financial platforms must recognize that voice technology operates as a supplementary accessibility layer meant to simplify complex tasks. Because activities like credit scoring and life or health insurance risk assessments are classified as high-risk, maintaining clarity and transparency in user interaction is mandatory. Jha points out, "Voice should reduce interaction burden, but users must never be trapped inside it."
In a resource-constrained mobile banking context, voice features must operate with strict algorithmic latency limits to prevent user abandonment. Extensive local data processing can degrade overall device performance, making rigorous hardware profiling and test-driven development methodologies essential for engineering teams. Jha observes, "In practice, a conversational experience is only perceived as ‘intelligent’ if it is also fast, stable, and operationally lightweight."
Optimizing the model execution pipeline requires breaking the architecture into discrete, testable stages that precisely isolate localized performance bottlenecks. Software deployment strategies shrink AI model sizes by 70-90% for local edge execution, keeping the consumer application responsive under severe computational load. Testing frameworks can then measure this performance against strict timing thresholds, such as an average latency of 2.453 microseconds for specific data operations.
Maintaining efficient network usage actively prevents conversational delays from impacting the execution of core banking transactions. Backend systems must process incoming voice requests swiftly, as event streaming infrastructure consistently ensures zero data loss and distributed scalability under institutional loads. Jha states, "The biggest architectural mistake in mobile AI is trying to run too much model complexity on-device."
Releasing updated voice models in a regulated consumer application demands strict version control mechanisms and observable deployment phases. These powerful neural models affect transaction framing and authentication logic, requiring formal, documented change management protocols. Jha explains, "Every voice model release must behave like a controlled change to a risk-bearing financial decision system — not just an app update."
A secure release pipeline relies on silent shadow deployments and isolated canary user cohorts before the model reaches general availability. Banking organizations increasingly maintain separate active and standby environments to facilitate automated rollbacks if any software regression occurs in production. This structural approach prevents operational disruptions while supporting the increasing enterprise demand for model interpretability.
Evaluating candidate models involves measuring their outputs against frozen historical benchmark suites for functional intent accuracy and regulatory compliance. This validation phase prevents analytical shifts that result in drastically different explanations or incorrect financial risk assessments for vulnerable end users. Jha concludes, "A candidate that is slightly more accurate but less controllable should not be promoted."
Improving conversational AI systems requires gathering accurate usage data, but regulated banks cannot compromise individual customer privacy to collect training signals. System telemetry must be authorized by the end user and processed to remove personal identifiers before remote transmission occurs. Jha emphasizes, "The design principle is simple: the system must never prioritize model performance over customer privacy or regulatory safety."
Processing raw audio data securely at the network periphery ensures that only anonymized, aggregated statistical metrics reach the corporate model servers. Edge computing architectures guarantee that no data leaves a device unless an anomaly is detected, minimizing privacy exposure for clients. Alternatively, cryptographic techniques like decentralized federated learning allow banks to learn effectively from collective user patterns by aggregating only the model updates back to the central server.
Differential privacy protocols deliberately add calibrated mathematical noise to collected AI gradients, preventing the retroactive malicious reconstruction of individual user inputs. This engineering approach guarantees regulatory alignment with global data laws without stalling iterative technological progress. Jha points out, "This prevents reconstruction attacks while enabling meaningful statistical learning."
The commercial success of conversational finance technology depends entirely on proving its operational value through objective, measurable business indicators. Tracking core operational metrics such as call-center human deflection rates and automated task completion rates demonstrates a direct financial return on technology investments. Jha notes, "When evaluating voice-enabled conversational finance, the primary objective is to link AI performance directly to business outcomes and operational value."
API integrations expand the utility of these banking voice assistants by connecting them directly to enterprise data streams. Connective AI protocols allow specialized digital agents to interact with streaming data by executing Flink SQL queries for generating actionable real-time insights. Furthermore, the mandatory implementation of security protocols like PKCE facilitates compliance with banking standards, including PSD2/PSD3, securing these automated analytical tasks permanently.
Initial adoption rates for relatively routine operations like account balance inquiries consistently yield measurable cost reductions for the global enterprise. As the automated voice system scales, the compounded savings provide capital for funding further advanced architectural innovations. Jha states, "Early pilots often show measurable reduction in repetitive inquiry handling, especially for low-risk, high-volume interactions."
The integration of advanced voice technology into mobile banking platforms requires a dedication to structural resilience, inclusive interface design, and secure data practices. By distributing computational workloads across optimized edge networks and cloud environments, financial institutions can maintain low latency without sacrificing regulatory compliance. Ultimate success in this technological domain relies on real-time performance monitoring, institutional data governance, and an overarching focus on providing safe financial tools for all demographic groups.
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:::tip This story was distributed as a release by Jon Stojan under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program.
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2026-04-22 13:52:10
With tools like Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Claude Code, tasks that used to sit on developers’ to-do lists get solved much faster than before.
On the development side, everything has sped up. But QA processes haven’t picked up the pace.
Someone still has to write Playwright tests from scratch, maintain selectors that break with every UI change, and debug failures manually. Any manual QA work done while code is being generated slows releases nearly to a halt..
In this post, we’ll dive deeper into this problem and how to address it.
Most teams are already using AI somewhere in their development process. Sometimes it’s as simple as asking it to help research a feature, or using tools like Cursor, Copilot, or Claude Code to write and refactor parts of the code faster.
These tools can also generate full-fledged API documentation, may even point out likely issues during code review, and take care of the boilerplate that used to eat up a surprising amount of the team’s time.

\ The daily rhythm is pretty consistent across teams: pick up a ticket, prompt your way through the logic, integrate it in your AI IDE, run some checks locally, and move on. Output that used to take a day now takes a morning. Whether that's a 5x or 10x jump depends on the team, but the direction is the same everywhere.
The problem shows up the moment that code leaves the dev's machine. Everything before that point has been touched by AI in some way. Everything after it? Still running on the same verification setup it was years ago. And that usually means one of two things:
A bottleneck caused by the speed and volume of test cases produced by machines without human intervention. Here:
Using legacy toolsets such as Selenium and Playwright to automate testing that still require large amounts of manual script creation and maintenance hours.
When compared to every other component in your stack, from IDEs to infrastructure, your QA process operates manually through inflexible and hard-coded script components. And this wasn’t overlooked on purpose; rather, test automation was already considered to be the modern test solution.
AI may speed up script creation, but it does not remove the cost of maintaining brittle tests.
The problem in the testing phase is that most “automated” test suites are only automated when they run properly. However, QA engineers or sometimes developers themselves still have to write and maintain them. Debugging failures still requires manual work on the developer’s end.
You have always been breaking your tests – changed a component library, modified the flow structure, or renamed a selector, and you have just knocked out a piece of your test suite. With AI, you’re just doing it faster and more often now. A user clicking that same button wouldn’t notice a thing, which prompts the question: should we even be testing this way?
The tests are brittle because they are dependent on specific DOM paths and on hard-coded sequences within your application. They cannot determine what they are testing; all they know is where to go based on the information that was given to them when they were written.

\ And now, your engineers are stuck in the “maintenance hell”, spending hours updating paths and fixing flaky tests every time a release impacts UI or user flow .
There is a compounding effect that comes directly with AI-powered development. When you’re shipping more code, the surface area your tests need to cover grows rapidly. However, your test suite doesn’t automatically increase in size as your code base does, which creates a widening gap between the amount of code that needs to be tested and the amount of code that is being tested after each sprint. It’s like you just migrated the bottleneck from the “write” phase to the “verify” phase.
There’s a big difference between automated testing and what people are starting to call agentic QA or AI testing.
Traditional tools still follow a fixed script – the same path, every time. Even when AI generates those scripts faster, the fundamental logic hasn’t changed: they break as soon as the UI does. Anyone who’s maintained a large automation suite knows exactly how fast these failures pile up.

\ Agentic QA tools approaches the problem differently. Instead of executing a fixed script, the system observes how the application behaves and builds an understanding of the interface and user flows. Tests are generated around goals rather than hard-coded paths. Agentic QA mimics user behavior, in all of its forms. It evaluates the app like a human would, not caring about variable names in the code.
That means small UI changes don’t immediately break everything. When a layout shifts or an element moves, the agent can usually adapt in the same way a human tester would.
Agentic QA tools integrate into your existing workflow without demanding a new process. They can run automatically on PRs, before releases, or on demand for exploratory testing – no test scripts to maintain, just findings to act on.
When a developer opens a pull request, AI testing tools like QA.tech get triggered. QA agent runs dynamic tests on the relevant user flow and leaves feedback directly on the PR if something breaks.
\ Developers can review the results right in the pull request.

\ \ What’s important, those are not the same tests like Coderabbit, or Greptile would run. QA.tech runs visual tests giving feedback from the end-user perspective and if their experience was good or broken. Things like test results summary, failed and passed test results along with their screenshots, test execution methodology, etc., are attached so it’s easier to understand how the test was executed, what the issue is, and where the issue likely started, if there are any.
PRs are just one layer, though. The QA agent takes it further, on much of the release-related testing work. Before every production release, it runs continuous checks across the entire application to catch those odd edge cases that manual testing often misses and traditional automated tests usually don’t cover, such as:
It runs a full regression across the entire app, not just the areas that were recently changed.
It can surface edge cases that only appear when multiple features interact with each other.
It highlights the severity of each issue so the team can quickly tell which problems are blockers and which ones can be addressed later.

\ In most teams, this simply makes debugging faster. Rather than working on debugging through flaky tests for hours, developers can see what broke and trace the issue back much more quickly.
Sooner or later, most CTOs run into the same question: “How do I ship more without increasing QA headcount?”
The answer usually isn’t adding more testers to the team. It’s making better use of the people you already have by reducing the time spent fixing or maintaining tests and allowing the team to focus on actual quality work.
Pricer saw this firsthand. Their QA team had been spending a lot of time fixing existing tests rather than adding new coverage. Once that maintenance load dropped, testing started happening earlier and more often in the development cycle.
The Upsales team saw the same pattern as well. Their QA lead managed 2 front-end engineers but still couldn’t cover all the possible workflows manually and testers were losing hours watching videos of the reproduced bugs. After adopting QA.tech, they replaced over 320 hours of manual testing every month, without hiring a single engineer.
This is where agentic QA begins to make a real difference in day-to-day testing work. Agentic QA testing doesn’t replace an entire team of engineers but takes away the maintenance aspect that consumes their time.
It’s worth asking your team a simple question. If you’ve already modernized the process of writing code, reviewing changes, and shipping releases, why is your QA process still running the same way it did a few years ago?
And if the answer is that “we haven’t found the right tool yet,” that’s probably something worth addressing sooner rather than later. The longer you wait to address it, the bigger that gap grows with every sprint.
Book a demo with QA.tech or learn more about the tool and see how agentic QA maps to your current dev stack.
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2026-04-22 13:51:45
If SeaTunnel Zeta is simply understood as “a faster execution engine,” its true value will be underestimated.
For data integration systems, the real challenge has never been “whether the pipeline can run,” but whether the following can be achieved at the same time: sufficiently high throughput, recoverability after failure, no data duplication or loss, and controlled resource consumption.
What makes Zeta worth serious attention lies exactly here: it does not win through a single performance optimization, but instead turns consistency, recovery, convergence under concurrency, and resource control into a closed-loop system capability.
Note: This article is based on SeaTunnel commit
c5ceb6490; all source code interpretations refer to this version. Runtime observations are based on the officialapache/seatunnel:2.3.13image and are intended to help understand the mechanisms, not as a strict benchmark for this commit.
From an architect’s perspective, SeaTunnel Zeta does not achieve both high throughput and stability through a single “performance optimization point,” but instead forms a closed loop of four capabilities:
None of these four layers can be missing. If the contract of any layer is broken, it will eventually manifest as duplicate writes, stalled recovery, checkpoint timeouts, or resource instability.
The most typical contradiction in data integration systems has never been “whether they can run,” but whether the following three conditions can be satisfied simultaneously:
This is why I prefer to understand Zeta as a stability engine for data integration scenarios, rather than a generalized computing engine.
From the source code design, it decomposes the problem into four clearly defined planes:
CheckpointCoordinator is responsible for triggering, progressing, completing, timing out, and terminating checkpointsCheckpointStorage, CompletedCheckpoint, and ActionSubtaskState handle snapshotting and recoverySourceSplitEnumeratorTask, Writers, Aggregated Committer, and intermediate queues embed control signals into the data processing flowResourceProfile, DefaultSlotService, and read_limithandle resource profiling, dynamic allocation, and throttlingArchitectural judgment: The highlight of Zeta is not the complexity of individual modules, but that it places “consistency, recovery, concurrency, and resources” into a unified protocol.
Many articles describe Exactly-Once as “the engine supports checkpoints, therefore Exactly-Once is guaranteed.” This is not rigorous from an architectural perspective.
In Zeta, Exactly-Once is at least divided into two layers:
prepareCommit must produce transferable and replayable CommitInfo, and commitmust be idempotent and retryableIn other words, Zeta provides an execution framework for Exactly-Once, rather than automatically guaranteeing it for all connectors.
In addition, the Sink side does not have only one commit path:
SinkAggregatedCommitter, it follows the path: Writer prepareCommit → Aggregated Committer aggregation → unified commit after notifyCheckpointComplete
SinkCommitter, the commit happens directly inside notifyCheckpointComplete(...) of the Writer taskThe following analysis focuses on the first path, as it better reflects Zeta’s coordination of consistency and commit timing at the engine level.
Taking the SinkAggregatedCommitter path as an example, the Exactly-Once main flow in Zeta is:
CheckpointCoordinator triggers a checkpoint and injects barriers into tasks
Each participant snapshots state at the barrier boundary and sends ACK
Sink Writer calls prepareCommit(checkpointId) without committing externally
SinkAggregatedCommitterTask aggregates CommitInfo and includes the result in checkpoint state
Only when the Coordinator determines the checkpoint is complete does it trigger the actual commit(...)
The architectural meaning of this chain is very clear: first solidify the consistency boundary, then perform external side effects.
If the Writer commits to the external system immediately after local processing, once the checkpoint fails to complete, the system will face two classic problems after recovery:
Zeta delays the commit action until after notifyCheckpointComplete, essentially doing one thing: binding external visible side effects to the completion of consistency.
If this is not clearly stated, it is easy to misinterpret:
SinkWriter.prepareCommit(checkpointId)is not a normal flush, but a phase-one protocol actionSinkCommitter.commit(...) must be idempotent, otherwise duplicates may still occur after recoveryArchitectural judgment: Exactly-Once is not a “switch,” but a responsibility chain across engine, connectors, and external systems.
Every architectural benefit comes with a cost, and Exactly-Once is no exception:
Many systems stop at “restoring state objects.” But in distributed data integration, this is not enough, because the protocol itself has progress.
Three points in Zeta’s recovery path are particularly worth attention.
CheckpointCoordinator.restoreTaskState(...) does not simply assign old state back to the original subtask. Instead, it determines the correct execution unit based on current parallelism and mapping.
This means it considers not “who ran last time,” but “who should take over this time.”
This is crucial because real-world recovery often involves:
On the Source side, what truly determines whether reading can continue correctly is not just the reader itself, but the allocation state of splits.
Therefore, Zeta places the recovery focus on SourceSplitEnumerator:
snapshotState(checkpointId)
SourceSplitEnumeratorTask.restoreState(...) decides whether to call restoreEnumerator(...) or createEnumerator(...)
open() is invoked and subsequent coordination resumesThis shows that its recovery approach is not about “restoring threads,” but about “restoring the scheduler.”
One of the most valuable details in this article is the re-signaling logic of NoMoreSplits after reader re-registration.
In SourceSplitEnumeratorTask.receivedReader(...), if a reader has previously been marked as having no more splits, then when it re-registers after recovery, the system will again call signalNoMoreSplits.
This detail is highly significant:
Without this step, the system may appear to have “successfully restored state,” but the reader could remain stuck waiting for more splits indefinitely.
Architectural judgment: A truly mature recovery mechanism restores “state + protocol position + control signals,” not just a serialized object.
When people think of high concurrency, they often think of parallelism, threads, and queue length. But for data integration engines, the more dangerous issue is actually: whether control messages are drowned out, and whether the shutdown process loses control.
Zeta’s design here reflects a clear engineering mindset.
From the task model perspective, Zeta’s high concurrency is not mysterious:
These are standard practices in distributed execution engines.
What stands out is that it does not treat “parallelism” as simply increasing processing threads, but treats how to terminate in an orderly way under concurrency as a first-class concern.
In the implementations of RecordEventProducerand IntermediateBlockingQueue, when a Barrier arrives, it is acknowledged with priority. If that Barrier triggers prepareClose for the current task, the system enters the prepareClose state, and ordinary records are no longer accepted into the queue.
This design addresses two common pitfalls in high-concurrency systems:
In other words, this is not “queue optimization,” but an architectural decision where control takes priority over throughput.
In data integration pipelines, downstream systems are often slower than upstream, and network/storage jitter is common.
If the system simply increases concurrency mechanically, three consequences arise:
So what Zeta demonstrates here is not just “high concurrency capability,” but:
It knows when to continue throughput, and when to first enforce consistency and lifecycle convergence.
“Low resource usage” is often misunderstood as “this engine consumes fewer machines.” Architecturally, a more accurate statement is:
The system avoids wasting resources on ineffective competition through a simpler resource model and explicit throttling mechanisms.
ResourceProfile uses CPU and Memory as core resource descriptors, and provides merge, subtract, and enoughThan.
This is not a highly detailed model, but it has two practical advantages:
The trade-off is also clear: it has limited expressiveness for network, disk, and downstream service bottlenecks.
Architectural judgment: This is a “good enough” resource model, not a “precise simulation” model.
In DefaultSlotService.requestSlot(...), if dynamic slots are enabled and remaining resources can satisfy the requested profile, a new SlotProfile is created on demand.
This means slots are not statically partitioned, but dynamically sliced based on available capacity.
Benefits:
But this does not mean the system is immune to overload. If upstream jobs expand parallelism uncontrollably, dynamic slots will only expose the problem faster.
checkpointInterval, checkpointMinPause, and checkpointTimeout are not just configurations, but stability valves:
interval: how frequently snapshots occurminPause: enforced gap between checkpointstimeout: maximum duration before abortImproper configuration leads to a vicious cycle:
Frequent checkpoints → higher state cost → slower barriers → more timeouts → more recovery → increased resource instability
Configurations like read_limit.rows_per_second and read_limit.bytes_per_second have high architectural value.
Because often the system is not “computationally insufficient,” but:
Therefore, for slow or rate-limited downstream systems, the recommended approach is:
Throttle first, observe, then scale.
From the current design, Zeta’s strengths are clear:
Correspondingly, its focus is not on maximizing every operator capability, but on:
prepareCommit(checkpointId)as a normal flushcommit(...) must be idempotent and retryablesnapshotState(...) and run(...) may run concurrently; ensure thread safetyaddSplitsBack(...) and reader failovercheckpoint.interval, checkpoint.timeout, and min-pause firstread_limit for fragile downstream systemssavepoint / restore demonstrationsIt is not valid in architecture articles to directly conclude that an "architecture is advanced" based only on a set of Total Read/Write and Total Time.
The sample statistics in the quick-start documentation can only demonstrate three things at most:
It alone cannot prove upper limits of high concurrency, recovery efficiency, or cost-performance ratio under different resource specifications.
I performed three additional minimal run validations: environment is a single Ubuntu host with 8 vCPU / 15Gi RAM, running the official apache/seatunnel:2.3.13 image in local mode.
32 / 32 / 0, total time 3s
parallelism=1, row.num=1000: 1000 / 1000 / 0, total time 3s
parallelism=4, row.num=1000: 4000 / 4000 / 0, total time 3s
These three sets of data clearly show: the same total time may correspond to completely different data volumes and parallelism settings.
Therefore, drawing conclusions about "performance" without parallelism, data scale, resource specifications, and job type easily leads to distortion.
In a batch job lasting approximately 12s, I added two sets of local-mode control-plane validations:
checkpoint.interval = 2000, 5regular checkpoints completed plus 1 final checkpoint were observed.min-pause = 5000, only 2regular checkpoints plus 1 final checkpoint were observed within similar job duration.read_limit.rows_per_second = 5, for the same 100 rows, job duration increased from ~12s to ~21s.This shows that min-pause and read_limit are not "decorative configurations" — they actually change control rhythm and runtime.
I also performed a validation in single-machine cluster mode specifically for savepoint / restore:
8s in a ~50s batch job, job status remained RUNNING, and checkpoint overview recorded 6 completed checkpoints.-s, job status became SAVEPOINT_DONE, and SAVEPOINT_TYPEappeared in checkpoint history.jobId to execute -r for restoration, foreground restoration completed in ~37s, final statistics 500 / 500 / 0.From only the final line 500 / 500 / 0, you cannot tell whether it "resumed from a breakpoint." But combined with the prior ~16sruntime and savepoint records, a more reasonable engineering judgment is: \n the restoration processed remaining splits, not a full re-run.
I also tested adding read_limit.bytes_per_second = 10000 to a large-field example; total duration remained ~12s. \n This more likely indicates that under this load pattern, FakeSource split reading became the bottleneck first — not simply that "byte rate limiting does not work." \n It again proves: discussing performance numbers without load context easily leads to misjudgment.
Of course, these are only runtime observations, not strict benchmarks based on the c5ceb6490build. \n They better support "mechanisms are effective, metrics must be interpreted carefully" rather than "absolute performance leadership."
Instead of only looking at throughput, I suggest observing four types of metrics simultaneously:
Two recommended comparison scenarios:
env {
job.mode = "STREAMING"
parallelism = 128
checkpoint.interval = 1000
}
source {
FakeSource {
row.num = 100000000
split.num = 128
split.read-interval = 1
}
}
sink {
Console {
}
}
env {
job.mode = "STREAMING"
parallelism = 32
checkpoint.interval = 5000
}
source {
FakeSource {
row.num = 100000000
split.num = 32
split.read-interval = 100
}
}
sink {
Console {
}
}
The above two configurations are more suitable for observing control links and recovery behavior, not for serious throughput benchmarking. \n FakeSource in c5ceb6490 supports split.read-interval, not rate.
In addition, row.num in FakeSource means total generated rows per parallelism. \n This must be accounted for when explaining test scale.
What these two scenarios truly compare is not just "who is faster," but:
A practical observation: in my minimal tests, min-pause did reduce checkpoint count within the same time window, and read_limit did increase total runtime. Both configurations are observable and verifiable.
If we regard Zeta as a stability engine, its most promising future direction may not be stacking more "performance parameters," \n but further turning existing control signals into adaptive capabilities.
For example:
read_limitbased on real-time metrics, instead of requiring manual throttling after backlog occurs?Furthermore, Exactly-Once capabilities on the connector side can become more explicit. \n Today we mostly express capability boundaries via interface implementations and code conventions. \n In the future, if idempotency, commit semantics, and retry boundaries become declarable, inspectable, observable contracts, \n the operability of the entire data integration pipeline will improve significantly.
This does not mean the current version fully supports these capabilities, \n but is a natural extension of the existing architecture:
Once the control plane, state plane, data plane, and resource plane form a closed loop, \n the next step can evolve from "recover after failure" to "predict before failure, adapt during runtime."
Looking at individual code points, many implementations in Zeta are not particularly flashy.
But architecturally, it gets several critical things right:
CheckpointCoordinator as a unified consistency control entryrestoreTaskState(...) and Enumerator-based recovery forming a complete resume loopprepareClose ensuring convergence under concurrencyResourceProfile, dynamic slots, and read_limit making resource control a system-level strategyWhat deserves recognition is not a single powerful module, but that it places the most failure-prone aspects of data integration systems into a unified, explainable engineering mechanism.
If you are an architect, what matters is not just whether it is fast, but whether it remains explainable, convergent, and operable under failure, recovery, commit, and resource fluctuation.
From this perspective, Zeta’s real value is not extreme optimization in one area, but placing these concerns into a system that can be traced, verified, and reasoned about.
SeaTunnel Zeta’s competitiveness lies not in pushing a single capability to the extreme, but in closing the loop across consistency, recovery, concurrency, and resource management.
If you want to further explore the source code, it is recommended to start with the following entry points. You can also follow the official SeaTunnel channel and reply with the keyword “anchors” to get more materials.
CheckpointCoordinator.tryTriggerPendingCheckpoint \n https://github.com/apache/seatunnel/blob/c5ceb6490/seatunnel-engine/seatunnel-engine-server/src/main/java/org/apache/seatunnel/engine/server/checkpoint/CheckpointCoordinator.java#L500-L582
CheckpointCoordinator.restoreTaskState \n https://github.com/apache/seatunnel/blob/c5ceb6490/seatunnel-engine/seatunnel-engine-server/src/main/java/org/apache/seatunnel/engine/server/checkpoint/CheckpointCoordinator.java#L306-L344
SeaTunnelSink \n https://github.com/apache/seatunnel/blob/c5ceb6490/seatunnel-api/src/main/java/org/apache/seatunnel/api/sink/SeaTunnelSink.java#L40-L127
SinkFlowLifeCycle.received / notifyCheckpointComplete \n https://github.com/apache/seatunnel/blob/c5ceb6490/seatunnel-engine/seatunnel-engine-server/src/main/java/org/apache/seatunnel/engine/server/task/flow/SinkFlowLifeCycle.java#L191-L244
SinkAggregatedCommitterTask.notifyCheckpointComplete \n https://github.com/apache/seatunnel/blob/c5ceb6490/seatunnel-engine/seatunnel-engine-server/src/main/java/org/apache/seatunnel/engine/server/task/SinkAggregatedCommitterTask.java#L303-L332
SourceSplitEnumeratorTask.restoreState \n https://github.com/apache/seatunnel/blob/c5ceb6490/seatunnel-engine/seatunnel-engine-server/src/main/java/org/apache/seatunnel/engine/server/task/SourceSplitEnumeratorTask.java#L187-L207
SourceSplitEnumeratorTask.receivedReader \n https://github.com/apache/seatunnel/blob/c5ceb6490/seatunnel-engine/seatunnel-engine-server/src/main/java/org/apache/seatunnel/engine/server/task/SourceSplitEnumeratorTask.java#L221-L246
DefaultSlotService.requestSlot \n https://github.com/apache/seatunnel/blob/c5ceb6490/seatunnel-engine/seatunnel-engine-server/src/main/java/org/apache/seatunnel/engine/server/service/slot/DefaultSlotService.java#L168-L189
speed-limit.md \n https://github.com/apache/seatunnel/blob/c5ceb6490/docs/zh/introduction/configuration/speed-limit.md
\
2026-04-22 13:49:59
Launched in 2022 by OpenAI, ChatGPT has become one of the most used apps worldwide, with over 900 million weekly active users as of early 2026. People from all around the world are using it for anything and everything, from writing emails to coding websites. Of course, cybercriminals are taking note of this, and they’ve already created some ways to misuse it to steal information and cryptocurrencies.
Let’s see what this is about, and how to avoid potential attacks.
The involved malware is a classic “infostealer”: a malicious piece of code designed to collect sensitive data from the infected device. That could be passwords saved in browsers, session cookies, private documents, wallet files (and private keys), or messaging app data. It gathers all quietly and sends it to a remote server —to the hacker, who will steal everything of value.
So, what does ChatGPT have to do with this? The key is the chat-sharing feature. In case you didn’t know, it’s possible to share any conversation with ChatGPT on social media or using a sharing link that you can paste anywhere. As discovered by the cybersecurity firm Kaspersky, some unknown actors abused this feature to distribute malware disguised as a macOS browser installation guide.

They bought ad spaces at the top of the Google results, and the links looked legitimate because they actually led to chatgpt.com. The detail is that they created the fake guide by themselves, and then shared it with everyone through these ads. As such, the shared chat contains instructions telling users to copy a line of code into macOS Terminal. That command downloads a malicious script from an external server and executes it, which is how users get infected with the infostealer.
Known as AMOS, short for Atomic macOS Stealer, security analysis shows this malware targets Chrome and Firefox profiles, Telegram Desktop data, and wallet applications like Electrum and Exodus. After harvesting information, it can install a backdoor that relaunches on reboot, giving remote access to the infected machine. Any victim could potentially be robbed of all their saved data and wallets.
Terminal commands can be risky because they provide access to system operations, so no legitimate app should request to use them. That trick has also been used on fake CAPTCHAs and Windows, for the same malicious reasons, and it’s an immediate red flag. Never change your own system with terminal commands unless you’re 100% sure of what you’re doing.
Besides this, apply the basics: keep your systems, apps, and antivirus updated, and your private keys offline. In Obyte, you can use a simple textcoin to keep most of your funds out of immediate reach for hackers.

\n Also, avoid clicking sponsored search results for downloads. Anyone can buy those spaces, including cybercriminals and scammers. Instead, navigate directly to official project sites by typing the address manually. Disable automatic password saving in browsers used for crypto activity, and consider a dedicated browser profile only for wallet extensions.
If you happen to come across any suspicious instructions, copy the command or link into a fresh AI chat and request a plain explanation of what it does. Reviewing the code before execution adds a simple but powerful safety layer between curiosity and loss. Never share sensitive information with AI chats, though. It can be leaked and robbed, too.
And remember: a few seconds of doubt can block a chain reaction that ends in an empty wallet. Don’t trust, verify.
Featured Vector Image by Freepik.