Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) stories
Organisations with remote staff may gain tighter access controls, as the new network aims to curb stolen-credential breaches without redesigning systems.
Pressure on firms to secure sensitive AI workloads is driving the summit agenda as adoption of confidential computing accelerates, IDC says.
Organisations running sensitive workloads on Google Cloud can now get independent verification that systems and data have not been altered.
Private preview access is now available as security teams race to govern AI agents and harden identity controls for a post-quantum era.
Rising regulatory pressure is forcing organisations to map encryption exposure now, as post-quantum threats loom over critical systems and data.
Hackers are already stockpiling encrypted data for Q-Day, when quantum machines could break RSA and ECC in minutes.
Enterprise security teams can now use AI prompts to renew or revoke certificates without bypassing Sectigo's approval and audit controls.
Most internet users should see no change, but validators must update systems by October 2026 or risk DNS resolution failures.
Only 34% of organisations have a current view of their digital certificates, leaving most exposed to outages from expired credentials.
Only 3% of Australian businesses have started preparing for post-quantum cryptography, leaving sensitive data exposed to harvest-now, decrypt-later attacks.
The upgrade gives government and regulated buyers a single device for legacy smart cards and passkeys, as agencies shift to stricter security rules.
Customers can now manage the full certificate lifecycle in one place as Sectigo targets expiry risks and quantum-ready testing.
Hyperscale customers are already testing hard drives designed to keep firmware and device trust intact as quantum computing threats grow.
Greater scrutiny of autonomous software is pushing firms towards open web standards that let users verify AI agents and trust their connections.
Quantum-resistant encryption and AI-driven automation are coming to Red Hat Enterprise Linux, as customers face tighter security and less manual upkeep.
Customers can now manage mixed-vendor networks and security from one platform as Extreme adds third-party device support and AI agents.
Security teams gain less risky certificate changes as Buoyant's Linkerd 2.20 automates trust anchor rotation and cuts control-plane memory use.
Rising cyber threats and hybrid work are pushing Australian employers to replace scattered badges, passwords and tokens with one credential.
Enterprise buyers will see QuSecure's post-quantum platform at MIT Sloan, as concern grows over encryption resilience ahead of quantum threats.
The hire signals a sharper focus on resilience and customer trust as buyers demand stronger governance from identity security suppliers.