
Tenable powers AI-driven exposure management with third-party data connectors and unified dashboards
In today's fragmented security landscape, large organisations juggle an average of 83 disconnected tools, leading to siloed operations and critical blind spots. The result is scattered data and operational inefficiencies across the attack surface. Tenable One addresses this complexity by consolidating exposure insights from both native and third-party tools into a unified, contextual view, transforming fragmented data into business-aligned intelligence.
Tenable One now features a vast and rapidly expanding ecosystem of out-of-the-box connectors, enabling seamless integration with widely used third-party tools for endpoint detection and response (EDR), cloud security, vulnerability management, operational technology security, ticketing systems and more. With new connectors launching throughout Q2 2025 and beyond, Tenable unifies security data across the enterprise, delivering a comprehensive and actionable view of organisational risk.
At the core of the platform is the Tenable Exposure Data Fabric, a scalable, cloud-native architecture that ingests, normalises, and connects data across the security ecosystem. This foundation feeds Tenable ExposureAI, the platform's machine learning engine that surfaces toxic risk combinations and hidden attack paths, and prioritises actions based on potential business impact.
New unified risk dashboards further elevate the platform's impact. Designed to eliminate time-consuming manual reporting, these dashboards offer fully customisable views that align to specific business roles and priorities. With flexible report configurations and powerful visualisation options, security teams can deliver insights and communicate risks faster and with greater business impact.
"The cybersecurity market is saturated with point solutions that operate in isolation, slowing security efforts and leaving organisations vulnerable," said Steve Vintz, co-chief executive officer and chief financial officer, Tenable. "The power of Tenable One enables organisations to view risks across security tools in context and focus remediation efforts on the exposures that matter most."
These innovations mark a major milestone following Tenable's acquisition of Vulcan Cyber and reinforce Tenable's commitment to lead the exposure management market with unmatched breadth, intelligence and operational scale.
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Arabian Business
44 minutes ago
- Arabian Business
Securing resources as trade continues to become more regional
There's no shortage of ambition when it comes to clean energy. Net-zero targets are everywhere. Capital is flowing into renewables. Technologies are evolving fast. But those ambitions are now coming up against a tough reality: the global trade system that once quietly enabled the clean energy shift is splintering. The old assumption that global supply chains would always deliver what was needed, when it was required, is looking shakier by the day. As the world is more committed than ever to decarbonisation, basic materials needed to get there are suddenly harder to secure. That mismatch is prompting a rethink at every level about how countries and companies go about getting hold of the resources they need. From copper and lithium to natural gas, the playbook is being rewritten. In general, three strategies are emerging. One is the revival of government-to-government deals to lock in supply. Another tries to localise supply chains entirely, which is ambitious, but often impractical. The third, and increasingly the most crucial, leans on the agility of commodity traders to find workarounds in a fractured market. Spotlight on traders Not everything can or should be solved at the state level. That's where commodity traders have become increasingly vital. Long seen as background players, these firms are now operating closer to the centre of the action. What makes them so effective is precisely what they're not: they're not governments, they're not bogged down in bureaucracy, and they're not tied to national agendas. When supply routes seize up or politics interferes, traders often keep the system running. They're evolving fast. Companies like Mercuria and Trafigura are moving beyond deal-making. They're beginning to buy stakes in infrastructure, acquiring refining assets, and in some cases even owning upstream production. That's a big shift: from middlemen to fully integrated players. One firm illustrating that shift is BGN International, the Geneva-based trading arm of Bayegan Group. As a major private commodity trader and one of the largest buyer of LPG from the US, BGN has traditionally played a crucial behind-the-scenes role, moving over 50 million tonnes of commodities a year. Today, they are stepping closer to the physical assets that underpin trade. Its recent acquisition of two mid-sized LPG tankers gives it a stronger foothold in gas shipping. In a world where flexibility and access are everything, it's a strategic move: part logistics play, part supply chain insurance. It shows how today's traders have evolved to be more than intermediaries; they're becoming builders of the very systems that keep energy moving. Africa, too, is a space to watch. With the African Export-Import Bank backing a US$3 billion facility to encourage intra-African fuel trade, there's real momentum behind localising energy flows. The idea is to connect African refineries with African buyers, cutting reliance on imports from faraway markets. Traders like BGN are positioned to help make that happen by handling credit, navigating logistics, and stitching together deals where others might struggle. In a world where supply chains are more brittle, that kind of nimbleness is essential. Traders operate with speed and flexibility, offering financial instruments to manage volatility. Their role now extends beyond simple logistics as they help contribute to the stability of the system. By absorbing shocks and facilitating continuity, they serve an important part in market flows even amid geopolitical disruptions. Resources are big business Some economies have decided the best way forward is to leverage the free market and cut large deals. What's often dubbed 'friend-shoring' has been gathering steam. 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Yet even when deposits exist, permitting, building, and launching a mine can take more than a decade. That's far too slow to align with 2030 emissions targets. Then there's the cost. Labour, regulation, and environmental standards in richer countries mean domestic refining and manufacturing can be significantly more expensive. A battery metal processed in the US, for instance, might cost 30 to 50 per cent more than one from China. That kind of margin quickly eats into competitiveness—unless companies (whether processing or assembly plants, or OEM's) are willing to backstop the difference. Other problems arise, too. Betting heavily on one material or process risks obsolescence if technologies evolve. Local opposition can block projects. And building entire parallel supply chains introduces the danger of wasteful duplication. That's why some analysts now advocate for something more flexible: what's sometimes called 'regional anchoring.' Rather than trying to do everything in-house, the idea is to focus on specific strengths, processing or assembly, while still importing other inputs. Done right, this middle path offers more resilience than total reliance on imports, but without the massive price tag of full autonomy. A system under pressure – but still moving What's clear is that the road to a greener energy system won't be smooth, and trade, or the lack of it, is becoming a major obstacle. The supply chains that support decarbonisation are increasingly shaped by politics as much as by market forces. Countries are responding in different ways: through diplomacy, through investment at home, and perhaps most effectively through partnerships with traders. All of these responses will remain in play. Bilateral deals will continue. Some will reshape whole sectors. Others will fizzle. But it's the traders who are increasingly critical in keeping the system coherent. 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Zawya
2 hours ago
- Zawya
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With over a billion devices protected to date from emerging cyberthreats and targeted attacks, Kaspersky's deep threat intelligence and security expertise is constantly transforming into innovative solutions and services to protect individuals, businesses, critical infrastructure, and governments around the globe. The company's comprehensive security portfolio includes leading digital life protection for personal devices, specialized security products and services for companies, as well as Cyber Immune solutions to fight sophisticated and evolving digital threats. We help millions of individuals and over 200,000 corporate clients protect what matters most to them. Learn more at


Zawya
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- Zawya
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