Cybersecurity threats and the race for technological advancements dominated recent news, with reports highlighting a widening gap in ransomware defenses, the ongoing search for new antibiotics, and the use of AI in investigations. Simultaneously, the rapid development of AI and its impact on computing power were also being closely observed.
According to a 2026 Ivantis State of Cybersecurity Report, the preparedness gap for cybersecurity threats has worsened, particularly in the realm of ransomware. The report indicated that 63% of security professionals consider ransomware a high or critical threat, yet only 30% feel very prepared to defend against it, creating a 33-point gap. Louis Columbus of VentureBeat noted that this gap has widened from 29 points the previous year. Furthermore, a 2025 CyberArk Identity Security Landscape report revealed that organizations worldwide have 82 machine identities for every human, with 42% of those machine identities having privileged or sensitive access, highlighting a significant vulnerability.
In other news, the search for new antibiotics continues to be a pressing issue. César de la Fuente, a bioengineer and computational biologist, identified antimicrobial resistance as a major global problem two decades ago. Infections caused by drug-resistant bacteria, fungi, and viruses are currently associated with over 4 million deaths annually, and a recent analysis published in The Lancet predicts this number could exceed 8 million by 2050. De la Fuente, along with synthetic biologist James Collins, warned of a "looming postantibiotic era" in a July 2025 essay in Physical Review Letters.
The development of AI and its impact on computing power were also prominent topics. Andrew Filev of Zencoder, writing in VentureBeat, drew a comparison to the Great Pyramid, noting that the illusion of smoothness in exponential growth can be deceptive. He referenced Intel co-founder Gordon Moore's prediction that the number of transistors on a microchip would double every year, later revised to compute power doubling every 18 months.
In a separate development, a cybersecurity researcher named Allison Nixon became the target of death threats in the spring of 2024. According to MIT Technology Review, individuals using online handles like "Waifu" and "Judische" posted threats on Telegram and Discord channels. These threats targeted Nixon because of her work tracking cybercriminals as chief research officer at the cyber investigations firm Unit 221B.
Finally, a BBC Eye Investigations report detailed how a dark web agent used clues found on a bedroom wall to rescue a girl from abuse. Specialist online investigator Greg Squire was able to determine the location of a 12-year-old girl by analyzing images shared on the dark web, even after the abuser attempted to conceal identifying features.
AI Experts & Community
Be the first to comment