Emerging NIST guidance suggests that the long-standing practice of treating AI as “just software” for cybersecurity purposes is giving way to more novel approaches to managing AI risks.
On December 16, 2025, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (“NIST”), a non-regulatory federal agency within the ...
The General Services Administration's new requirements for protecting controlled unclassified information apply immediately ...
Pioneering AI Automated GRC for Federal Agencies and High-Security Organizations Since 2021 Reaching five years of continuous ...
Security teams need to be thinking about this list of emerging cybersecurity realities, to avoid rolling the dice on ...
As CMMC Phase One enforcement begins and independent validation replaces self-attestation for defense contractors handling ...
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) recently released their initial preliminary draft of NIST IR 8596, also known as ...
It could take a supercomputer 149 million years to decrypt data that has been encrypted with the RSA-2048 public-key ...
CobbleStone Software, a recognized leader in contract lifecycle management (CLM) and contract artificial intelligence, ...
A phased guide to AI governance in cloud-native systems, aligning ISO 42001:2023 and NIST AI-RMF with lifecycle controls, ...
The Department of Defense (DoD) is making major changes to the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC) program, ...
With stricter DoD oversight, automation is becoming critical for defense contractors seeking faster, scalable, and ...