Skip to main content
Will the real IT pro please stand up?
To:Brew Readers
IT Brew // Morning Brew // Update
How do you fight IT impersonation? With donuts!

It’s Wednesday! Happy April Fools’ Day! Note to self: Probably not the best day to send out your highly deceptive phishing simulation email…

In today’s edition:

And introducing…

Brand new eyes

🫂 Got you covered

—Billy Hurley, Caroline Nihill, Brianna Monsanto

CYBERSECURITY

Phishing hook going through a mouse pointer arrow

Francis Scialabba

Some adversaries are really putting the “actor” in threat actor.

Cybercrime groups are impersonating IT pros to steal employee passwords or install malware. One big way to defend against these imitators is employee awareness—not just of the threat itself, but also the company’s own IT staff.

We spoke with IT pros who shared strategies on how to get acquainted with employees—and why that human touch pays off when threat actors act like admins.

Act I. For years, adversaries and pen testers have been imitating IT pros—to malicious effect. Some recent examples:

  • In January 2026, Mandiant revealed that a cybercrime extortion group posed over the phone as an IT pro updating the company’s multi-factor authentication settings. The adversaries then directed victims to believably branded credential harvesting sites.

How one IT pro used free breakfast to build trust.—BH

Presented By Deel

IT OPERATIONS

Collaged images of AI training cluster, binary code, and hands installing hardware equipment. (Credit: Illustration: Anna Kim, Photos: Adobe Stock)

Illustration: Anna Kim, Photos: Adobe Stock

What you don’t know could hurt you. That’s why IT pros need dashboards and other monitoring tools that provide maximum insight into their increasingly hybridized IT infrastructure—but what if they’re not getting what they need?

AI could help ensure IT teams have full visibility into on-premises and cloud systems. Kevin Sheu, VP of product and solutions at Versa Network, which provides security, networking, cloud, and analytics, told IT Brew that AI products can help fuse systems together for boosted visibility, especially when combined with Model Context Protocol (MCP), an open-source framework that standardizes how AI platforms integrate and share data with other tools.

Hybridized environments are the norm for most organizations today, but they can lead to disparities in the ability to monitor cloud services versus on-premises capabilities, Raghu Nandakumara, Illumio’s VP of industry strategy, told IT Brew. Those disparities, in turn, can lead to cybersecurity issues.

How many companies have 100% visibility?—CN

CYBERSECURITY

A medieval shield with digital lines going through it with a computer mouse pointing at it close with binary code and a black and green squares behind it on a dark blue background

Francis Scialabba

Everyone needs somebody to lean on: Batman has Robin, Calvin has Hobbes, and Beavis has Butthead. Now, CISOs can soon join that list, with a new partner-in-crime that can support them during security incidents.

Earlier this month, BreachRx announced the launch of a cybersecurity incident response management (CIRM) warranty, which it claims is the “industry’s first contractually backed financial safeguard” for CISOs and other organization leaders.

Warranty FAQ. The warranty will be available to enterprises who purchase BreachRx’s product plans at the beginning of next month. When CISOs and other executives use BreachRx’s platform during the incident response and recovery process, they can get warranty-backed coverage of up to $3 million to use toward costs that would have fallen on them or their companies, like fines or regulatory defense costs. BreachRx’s warranty is intended to supplement directors and officers (D&O) insurance, which CISOs tend to lack coverage under since they are often not regarded as corporate officers.

Why BreachRx felt now was a good time to roll out a warranty.BM

Together With Arctic Wolf

PATCH NOTES

Picture of data with "Clean Me" written on it + bottle of cleaner in front of it, Patch Notes

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top IT reads.

Stat: $399.6 billion. That was 2025’s global cloud spend, a 24% jump YoY. (TechRadar Pro)

Quote: “What would have been eyebrow-raising compensation a year ago is now considered OK to pay, no questions asked, by many recently funded startups.”—Michael Zhang, CEO of recruiting firm Candidate Labs, on current startup compensation packages for AI talent (the Wall Street Journal)

Read: Retro-inspired tech is all the rage these days. (TechCrunch)

Provision like a pro: Deel’s new self-assessment helps you evaluate how your current IT workflows handle the pressure of distributed teams. You will learn why automated, API-driven provisioning keeps replacing manual checklists. Download it here.*

*A message from our sponsor.

Ransomware tactics are evolving faster than your patch schedule. Join IT Brew on April 15 to unpack what’s actually changing, where attackers are getting in, and how IT teams can stay one step ahead without chasing every headline. Register here.

Sopa Images/Getty Images

Sopa Images/Getty Images

Slack’s latest Slackbot upgrade could lighten the load for IT teams. This story breaks down how the bot pulls answers from chats, docs, and connected tools—and why it could streamline help-desk support as GenAI assistants spread across the workplace.

Check it out

SHARE THE BREW

Share the Brew

Share the Brew, watch your referral count climb, and unlock brag-worthy swag.

Your friends get smarter. You get rewarded. Win-win.

Your referral count: 5

Click to Share

Or copy & paste your referral link to others:
itbrew.com/r/?kid=9ec4d467

         
ADVERTISE // CAREERS // SHOP // FAQ

Update your email preferences or unsubscribe here.
View our privacy policy here.

Copyright © 2026 Morning Brew Inc. All rights reserved.
22 W 19th St, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10011

Top insights for IT pros

From cybersecurity and big data to cloud computing, IT Brew covers the latest trends shaping business tech in our 4x weekly newsletter, virtual events with industry experts, and digital guides.

By subscribing, you accept our Terms & Privacy Policy.

A mobile phone scrolling a newsletter issue of IT Brew