Skip to main content

 

The PKI Evolution

⛓️ Digital Trust, Reimagined: Are You Ready for the Post-Quantum Era?

🤿 Take a Deep Dive into the transformation of Public Key Infrastructure (PKI). Far beyond just website security, PKI is being rebuilt to secure a new world of intelligent, connected technology.

🎓 Discover the critical shifts redefining digital security:

➡️ The Quantum Threat: Understand the “harvest now, decrypt later” risk that makes today’s encryption obsolete and why the migration to post-quantum cryptography is an urgent priority.

➡️ The Rise of Machines: Learn how PKI provides verifiable identities for billions of IoT devices and autonomous AI agents, securing everything from smart cities to intelligent systems.

➡️ The Secure Supply Chain: See how PKI is becoming essential for DevSecOps, protecting the software supply chain with signed code and tamper-proof SBOM attestations.

📢 For cybersecurity leaders, architects, and strategists, this report is your guide to the transformational forces reshaping digital trust. Prepare for the future, today.


📄 The PKI Evolution: Navigating the Convergence of Trust, Identity, and Quantum Disruption (https://bit.ly/41KUxTo)

📄 The PKI Revolution: Infrastructure Transformation in the Post-Digital Era (https://bit.ly/3HJKXt7)


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Updating computer's AD Security Group membership without rebooting

I found the following to be very useful - From the elevated command prompt execute “ klist –li 0x3e7 ” to view the logon session of the computer account . To purge them, simply execute “ klist –li 0x3e7 purge ”. A typical use case might involve targeting GPOs based on computer's group membership. When you add computer to the group in order to test the application of policies you can reboot it or, alternatively, run the above mentioned to clear logon sessions, then do “ gpupdate /force ” and check. In a spirit of giving credit where credit is due, I found a few references to this, but the one I learned it from was  http://setspn.blogspot.com/2010/10/updating-servers-security-group.html

WordPress displays weird characters

Sometimes after a database conversion (e.g. from MySQL to MariaDB) or due to encoding issues a situation might arise when WordPress is showing weird characters. A quick way of remedying the situation would involve examining the pages to discover a pattern (what characters are being substituted, in the example below the apostrophe was replaced by  ’ ) then running an queries against the database to reverse the effect. Here's a quick example (common tables that store content): UPDATE  wp_posts  SET  post_content =  REPLACE (post_content,  'Â' ,  '' )      UPDATE  wp_posts  SET  post_content =  REPLACE (post_content,  '’' ,  "'" )      UPDATE  wp_postmeta  SET  meta_value =  REPLACE (meta_value,  'Â' ,  '' )      UPDATE  wp_postmeta  SET  meta_value =  REPLACE (me...
  AI Agents as Trusted IoT/Software Defined Devices 🤖 Your Newest Endpoint Isn’t a Laptop; It’s an AI Agent. Are You Ready to Secure It? Dive into the next frontier of cybersecurity. Autonomous AI agents are no longer just code; they are powerful actors in our digital ecosystems. Treating them as simple software leaves a massive security gap. Our latest report introduces a new paradigm: The AI Agent as a Software-Defined Device. Discover the essential framework for securing the agentic future: ➡️ The Agent-as-Device Model: Learn why abstracting agents as software-defined devices, similar to IoT endpoints, is the key to managing their complexity and risk. Secure the “hardware” (host), “software” (agent logic), and “network” (communications). ➡️ A Digital Passport for AI: Move beyond static API keys. Explore how Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) and Verifiable Credentials (VCs) create a cryptographic root of trust, giving every agent a verifiable identity and provable permissions. ➡️...