CISA's new binding operational directive comes amid persistent concerns about nation-state adversaries targeting end-of-service edge devices, like routers.
CISA issued Binding Operational Directive 26-02, requiring agencies to remove unsupported edge devices and strengthen asset lifecycle management.
CISA orders federal agencies to inventory, upgrade, and remove unsupported edge devices within 12–18 months to reduce ...
San Diego’s IT crews just got a not‑so‑subtle nudge from Washington. The FBI’s local field office is warning organizations across the region after U.S. and U.K. cyber agencies issued a joint alert ...
Some Apple users have been warned to stop using Google Chrome as a browser. Here's why.
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA)has issued Binding Operational Directive 26-02, Mitigating Risk ...
CISA has issued a new directive requiring federal agencies to decommission all end of support edge devices within 12 months to reduce ongoing exploitation risks ...
Intel Arc users are enabling XeSS 3 on unsupported GPUs, achieving up to triple FPS despite no official driver support yet.
U.S. federal agencies have 12 months to start replacing risky network appliances running past their vendor support cutoff date under a directive published Thursday ...
CISA has ordered all civilian federal agencies to identify and remove "end-of-support" hardware and software that vendors no longer patch or maintain. The new directive, known ...
The directive targets firewalls, routers, and VPNs that are no longer receiving vendor patches, as nation-state actors shift their tactics from endpoints to infrastructure.
Microsoft’s strict Windows 11 requirements have turned a routine upgrade into a referendum on who deserves modern software.