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This cybersecurity tool is hurling cheaper simulated attacks at companies.

Wednesday! ICYMI, it’s the Year of the Horse! Speaking of horses, ditch the long face when helping out your neigh-bors who’ve forgotten their password.

In today’s edition:

Copy that!

New ISAC on the block

Keeping up with the Kard-AI-shians

—Billy Hurley, Brianna Monsanto

CYBERSECURITY

Pixelated mouse arrows attacking personal screens.

Anna Kim

A research tool called ALOHA could receive a welcoming “hello!” from resource-strapped companies that need sophisticated cybersecurity tests.

Designed by researchers from Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), this agentic system emulates cyberattacks like ransomware-style recon and lateral movement.

PNNL data scientist Loc Truong and cybersecurity researcher Kris Willis see the simulator providing organizations with capabilities that have often belonged to teams with bigger budgets and more specialized expertise.

“I envision that any team—from big organization to small—can find it useful, but particularly small,” Truong said.

How it works. ALOHA (Agentic LLMs for Offensive Heuristic Automation) allows teams to test their system against a tuned list of company-impacting vulnerabilities.

Takeaways from our demo of the tool.BH

Presented By The Crew

CYBERSECURITY

A robot hand holding crypto coins

Francis Scialabba

The Crypto ISAC is starting off its new year with a bang.

In January, the central information sharing hub for the digital currency industry announced an expanded “integration” with Coinbase, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the world, that would allow it to share real-time threat intelligence with its Crypto ISAC community members.

Chain reaction. Justine Bone, executive director of the Crypto ISAC, told IT Brew that the expanded relationship with Coinbase, one of the ISAC’s founding members, will offer community members highly confidential, vetted data that they can incorporate into their defensive profiles (e.g., crypto wallet addresses have been found in illicit transactions).

“That means, with confidence, the recipients of this data, which are other member companies, can act on it, so it becomes actionable at scale in that automated way at the pace that we need to move at,” Bone said.

What the next few years look like for this ISAC.—BM

HARDWARE

WD Ultrastar data center SMR drive

WD

It’s a new dawn, it’s a new day, it’s a new life, and Western Digital, which just debuted its new name of WD, is feeling good.

That was the main takeaway from WD’s 2026 Innovation Day event in New York City, where executives detailed how the more than half-century-old hard disk drive (HHD) manufacturer is evolving to meet the future demands of AI. CEO Irving Tan said WD is transforming into “a data center company that’s at the heart of AI.”

The only way is up. Tan sees several growth opportunities for WD in the AI era, including the monetization of AI inferencing, the actual act of prompting a model to make a decision based on information it already has.

“Every query that you put in, every prompt, that history has to be stored. That’s going to not only generate significant amounts of data, it’s going to also generate [a] significant amount of storage,” Tan said. Other tech leaders are trying to cash in on inferencing; for example, former Oracle CEO Safra Catz told stakeholders on a 2025 earnings call that the company was “aggressively pursuing” the inferencing market.

But wait, there’s moreBM

Together With Gartner

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: Almost 750. That’s the number of ransomware incidents the IT sector encountered in 2025, according to the IT-ISAC. (Cybersecurity Dive)

Quote: “The problem is they don’t have enough money to spend on the very security features that we all desperately need to stop being a bunch of idiots.”—Michael Winser, co-founder of Alpha-Omega, an associated Open Source Security Foundation project, on the financial crisis hitting open-source infrastructure (The Register)

Read: The once-popular comp sci major is losing its groove. (TechCrunch)

two hands shaking joining forces marketing brew

Francis Scialabba

When two companies combine, their tech stacks don’t always cooperate. IT leaders share practical advice—from auditing tools to securing admin access—on keeping systems running smoothly post-merger.

Read now

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