- Iran will treat any attack as ‘all-out war against us,’ says senior Iran official Reuters
- Iran warns ‘finger on trigger’ as Trump claims Tehran wants talks Dawn
- US, Iran exchange threats of broadscale war in latest sabre rattling Al Jazeera
Author: admin
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Iran will treat any attack as 'all-out war against us,' says senior Iran official – Reuters
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Expris Advances Robotic Object Recognition With 3D Semantic Scene Graphs
Scientists are tackling the limitations of current robotic object recognition, which frequently struggles with semantic consistency despite advances in deep learning. Marian Renz, Martin Günther, and Felix Igelbrink, from the German Research…
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Language learning, from Chomsky to Kubrick’s 2001
I was disappointed with Yann LeCun’s Lunch with the FT (January 3). If this guru’s definition of intelligence is as basic as he claims, I doubt we will ever make transformative progress with AI. He reduces it all to a crass example of…
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Lighting a brighter future for Afghan children: how community-based education is rebuilding kids’ dreams
Humaira’s dream
Humaira (21) teaches one of these classes in central Afghanistan, where she lives with her family of nine.
‘Education shapes who we are and how we see the world. Before, I thought our village was the centre of…
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A Celebration of Collaboration in Cyber Defense
The Genesis of Collective Defense
At certain moments in a career, you get the rare opportunity to look back and say, this work mattered. Not because of an individual accomplishment, but because it contributed to something larger — something that changed how an industry thinks and operates. The Cyber Threat Alliance (CTA) is one of those efforts.
When the CTA was first conceived in 2014, the cybersecurity industry looked very different than how it does today. Threat intelligence was widely viewed as a competitive advantage, tightly guarded and rarely shared beyond company walls. Collaboration between major security vendors — especially direct competitors — was almost unheard of. The prevailing mindset was simple: information was power, and power was proprietary.
Against that backdrop, a bold idea emerged: What if competitors worked together for the collective defense of customers and the broader digital ecosystem? What if sharing high-fidelity threat intelligence could raise the cost for adversaries and make everyone safer? As Mark McLaughlin, then CEO of Palo Alto Networks, famously put it at the time, the importance of the future CTA was clear: “Don’t let this fail.”
With that charge, four industry leaders — Palo Alto Networks, Fortinet, McAfee (Intel Security) and Symantec — came together on a handshake agreement to prove that collaboration at scale was not only possible, but necessary. It was, by any measure, a radical idea. Yet those early conversations laid the foundation for what would become the Cyber Threat Alliance.
The Architecture of Trust: Turning Vision into Reality
Turning that vision into reality required more than shared intent. A small working group representing each founding company was tasked with answering hard questions: what the CTA should be, what it should not be and how it could operate independently while earning trust across the industry. With guidance from experts familiar with the ISAC and ISAO landscape, the group worked through governance models, legal frameworks and operational structures. This involved reading more bylaws and legal documents than anyone ever hoped to encounter, but it was essential work. The CTA needed to be built deliberately, with integrity and clarity of purpose.
As the organization took shape, strong leadership became critical. That need was met when Michael Daniel, fresh from serving as Cybersecurity Coordinator for President Obama, stepped in to lead the CTA. His experience, credibility and ability to navigate both policy and industry realities helped propel the organization forward during its formative years.
Fast forward to 2026. As the CTA marks its ninth anniversary, the mission that sparked its creation remains relevant and urgent. The CTA has grown its influence beyond data sharing.
The CTA stands in a unique position to provide oversight and technical influence as a global leader in cybersecurity policy by representing the member companies in one place. With the expanding membership that spans across the globe, the CTA is now an essential piece of global cybersecurity infrastructure. Adversaries continue to evolve, borders remain irrelevant to cyber threats and no single organization can defend alone. What has changed is our proof point: collaboration works.
Reflecting on Nine Years and the Road Ahead
For those of us who have had the privilege of being involved since the earliest days, it has been remarkable to watch a bold idea turn into a trusted global institution. What began as a handful of competitors agreeing to try something different has grown into an organization that meaningfully influences how the industry shares intelligence, engages on policy and works together to protect customers worldwide.
Being part of that journey — helping shape the foundation, watching it mature and continuing to support its growth — has been one of the most professionally rewarding experiences of my career.
The CTA’s success is not defined solely by years or membership numbers, but by the collective commitment of its members to act in the interest of the broader ecosystem. Every shared indicator, every technical contribution and every policy engagement strengthens not just individual companies, but the security of communities across the globe.
As we look ahead, the call to action is simple: stay engaged, stay committed and continue to collaborate. Whether through sharing intelligence, contributing technical expertise or helping shape global cybersecurity policy, each member plays a role in ensuring the CTA remains a trusted and effective force against today’s most pressing cyber threats.
The work is far from done. Together, we are better positioned than ever to meet what comes next.
Happy 9th Anniversary, CTA!
Figure1. Celebrating 9 Years of the CTA Additional Resources
Sharing Threat Intelligence Makes Everyone Safer – Michael Sikorski, Palo Alto Networks
More About The Author
Kathi Whitbey is the Lead Principal Program Manager for Unit 42 at Palo Alto Networks, where she has spent more than a decade driving strategic programs and initiatives. She played a pivotal role in the formation and incorporation of the Cyber Threat Alliance (CTA), including leading early efforts to design and operationalize the CTA Platform for secure intelligence sharing among member companies.Deeply committed to the mission of Unit 42,
Kathi is a strong advocate for the team’s work and a dedicated mentor to emerging professionals in cybersecurity and risk management. Her career includes leadership roles in software development management and technical training across multiple U.S. government organizations, including the Department of State, where she traveled globally to deliver training on custom software applications. In addition to her professional work, Kathi has served as a volunteer Emergency Medical Technician, including a 12-month deployment supporting the U.S. Navy at Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti, Africa. She holds a Master’s degree in Information Systems and brings together technical expertise, operational leadership and a deep commitment to service and collaboration.
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Diet, exercise habits rarely change after retirement, study finds
A November South Australian study published in Economic Analysis and Policy found that diet and exercise habits seldom change after retirement, citing a need for healthy lifestyle habits during an individual’s working life to…
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Trump withdraws Carney’s invitation to Board of Peace – The Washington Post
- Trump withdraws Carney’s invitation to Board of Peace The Washington Post
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- Trump withdraws Canada’s invitation to Board of Peace BBC
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This $93 gadget solved my Apple CarPlay issues instantly
The amount of road trips I’ve embarked on in the last eight years since leaving home has put enough scenic miles on my car that I should be considered for a Subaru commercial. That is, if Subaru was trying to sell a forgotten warehouse of…
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12 Hours With the Hermès Plein Air Matte Foundation
Designed to melt instantly into skin, all of this is spun into a lightweight cream that deposits medium, buildable luminous matte coverage meant to last for up to 16 hours. While “luminous matte” might feel like an oxymoron, it really hints…
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