The USB Was Never the Real Vulnerability
Many years ago, a friend of mine was involved in security auditing and awareness testing. During one assessment, he used a very simple exercise. Since he had legitimate... Read more.
AI Data Centers Are No Longer Just a Capacity Problem. They Are a Security Architecture Problem.
The AI race is exposing something very basic, but still underestimated: artificial intelligence is not only a software story. It is also a physical infrastructure... Read more.
AI Data Centers Are Turning Security Into a Cyber-Physical Resilience Challenge
As AI workloads increase density, automation and infrastructure dependency, data center security must evolve from isolated controls to integrated operational decision-making.... Read more.
When the Human Factor Becomes the Access Point: Rethinking Insider Risk in Data Center Security
Data center security often focuses on the visible layers of protection: perimeter controls, access systems, surveillance, biometrics, mantraps, vendor procedures,... Read more.
When No One Owns the Grey Zone: The Hidden Weakness in Data Center Security
In complex data center environments, incidents rarely belong to one team. The real risk appears when physical security, cyber, infrastructure, vendors, and operations... Read more.
Security Does Not Scale with Complexity in Data Centers
As data centers grow in scale and interdependence, a common assumption emerges: more controls will solve the problem. More monitoring, more procedures, more escalation... Read more.
Why Data Center Security Fails: The Real Problem Is Decision-Making
Most data center security environments do not fail because something is missing, but because at some point everything starts happening at once. Access control triggers,... Read more.
The Gap Between Security Design And Operational Reality
In most environments, security systems are designed to work under controlled assumptions, with clear procedures, defined roles, and predictable responses. On paper,... Read more.
