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Explore the latest frameworks in information security. Stay updated on guidelines to protect your digital assets and ensure data privacy.

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A security framework is an organized set of principles, practices, and controls for managing information and technology risk. Frameworks such as the NIST Cybersecurity Framework, ISO/IEC 27001, and COBIT help organizations structure activities including identifying assets and risks, protecting systems, detecting events, responding to incidents, and recovering operations. They are reference models rather than automatically effective security programs: an organization must select and implement measures appropriate to its systems, threats, and risk tolerance.

Practitioners use frameworks to assign responsibilities, prioritize vulnerability remediation, assess suppliers and cloud services, and document why particular controls are in place. They also provide a common vocabulary for audits, regulatory or contractual evidence, and measuring improvement over time. News under this tag may concern revisions to framework requirements, mappings between frameworks, assessment findings, or failures caused by treating a framework checklist as proof that controls work. A framework can guide governance and security operations, but it does not replace technical testing, continuous monitoring, or judgment about specific attack surfaces.

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Analysts Say Pentagon Must Add Guardrails to Musk's Grok in Military SystemsCybersecurity analysts said Elon Musk’s Grok artificial intelligence model lacks compliance with key federal AI risk frameworks, which will likely force the Pentagon to rely on containment measures while conducting adversarial testing and restricting access to prevent unpredictable or unsafe behavior when embedding the model across its systems.

Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a previously undocumented and feature-rich malware framework codenamed VoidLink that's specifically designed for long-term, stealthy access to Linux-based cloud environments According to a new report from Check Point Research, the cloud-native Linux malware framework comprises an array of custom loaders, implants, rootkits, and modular