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  • FEBRUARY/MARCH 2026

    Corporate Security & Mitigating Risk

    More content from FEBRUARY/MARCH 2026

    Credit: Sansert Sangsakawrat
    Model bias in policing and security analytics is often mischaracterized as a purely demographic or social issue. In practice, bias is much broader and more subtle. In security AI, model bias refers to consistent and predictable errors in how a system interprets activity and determines what is significant.
    As AI-powered analytics become foundational to enterprise security operations, their promise of objectivity is increasingly undermined by embedded assumptions, biased data, and...
    March 6, 2026
    Credit: Thinkhubstudio
    The evolution of AI in physical security is not simply about automation; it is about improving how humans interact with complex systems and accelerating outcomes that once required hours or days of manual effort.
    How AI-enabled analytics are transforming physical security investments into measurable business, safety, and operational gains.
    March 6, 2026
    Credit: EvgeniyShkolenko
    The question today isn't whether healthcare facilities should adopt AI-powered security; it's understanding where these tools can have an immediate impact without adding operational burden.
    AI-powered security tools are moving beyond hype and pilot projects, giving healthcare organizations practical ways to prevent incidents, protect patients and staff, and maintain...
    March 6, 2026
    Credit: tumsasedgars
    When done correctly, security companies can significantly reduce the likelihood of policy violations, limit reputational and legal exposure, and create an environment in which employees can engage responsibly on social platforms. Treating social media policies as a checkbox is a risky practice.
    Recent online backlash tied to employee conduct reveals why many corporate social media policies fail and how clearer governance, training and enforcement can prevent reputational...
    March 6, 2026
    Credit: Dilok Klaisataporn
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    When “nothing bad has happened” becomes an excuse for inaction, security funding stalls. This feature explains why “selling security” fails and how leaders can reposition physical...
    March 6, 2026
    Credit: Kriangsak Koopattanakij
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    Leadership training and experience matter, but sustained reading is the overlooked discipline that sharpens judgment, accelerates maturity, and strengthens decision-making at ...
    March 6, 2026
    Credit: Grafissimo
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    As AI automates scanning, compliance, and mitigation, cybersecurity isn’t disappearing; it’s evolving into a higher-order discipline defined by judgment, governance, and human...
    March 6, 2026
    Credit: smartboy10
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    Rising energy demand, persistent intrusions, and fragmented defenses are tightening the grid’s operating margin and exposing new vulnerabilities.
    March 6, 2026
    Credit: AscentXmedia
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    Across higher education and K-12 institutions, a reluctance to embrace command, control, and communication, not a lack of cameras, is driving repeated failures to meet legal duty...
    March 6, 2026
    Luis Fieldman
    Flowers and candles were laid in front of Brown University's Barus and Holley building, seen here on Monday, Dec. 15, 2025, after a shooting left two dead and nine injured on Saturday.
    The after-action reviews underway at Brown highlight a national reckoning for higher education: campus safety failures are rarely about missing technology, but about fragmented...
    Dec. 26, 2025
    FangXiaNuo / E+ via Getty Images
    Cyber adversaries increasingly target executives through account takeover, OSINT harvesting and AI-enabled impersonation — attacks that often escalate beyond the digital domain.
    The increase in violent threats and attacks against CEOs and other execs demands a unified approach to security that combines the digital and physical domains.
    Dec. 10, 2025