A former U.S. DOGE Service employee claimed he had access to two highly sensitive agency databases and planned to share the information with his private employer, the whistleblower said.
Enterprises are deploying AI agents that act like employees—with access rights, permissions, and the ability to cause real damage. Identity governance hasn't caught up.
If true, the actions could constitute one of the "largest known data breaches in American history," Sen. Ron Wyden warned.
A cybersecurity researcher's AI agent accessed millions of McKinsey employee chat messages and hundreds of thousands of sensitive file names within two hours, exposing the firm's internal AI platform, ...
The fallout from DOGE staffers' efforts to access sensitive Social Security data continues as an agency watchdog disclosed a ...
Meta’s rapid push into generative AI has amplified a familiar security truth: the biggest risk often isn’t the model itself, ...
Cao Wenqing was earlier convicted following a trial. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Popular crypto gift card firm Bitrefill discloses North Korea-linked hack.
The Department of Homeland Security wants access to the Federal Parent Locator Service, which is considered to be the government’s largest, most detailed database, ProPublica reports. The database, ...
Credential compromise and MFA bypass have redefined the insider threat. The attacker logging in with stolen session tokens ...
ServiceNow's new Autonomous Workforce framework inherits enterprise permissions from deployment — so AI specialists can't ...