
March 2026
Key cyber trends straight from the desk of Cyber Intelligence
- Edge devices continue to be targeted by nation-state and financially motivated threat actors due to their privileged network position and limited native security telemetry.
- So what? Consider edge devices high-risk infrastructure, and respond by hardening configurations, increasing visibility, and prioritising patching.
- OpenClaw poses a security risk to enterprise workflows – a major database misconfiguration in agentic “personal assistant” OpenClaw exposed over 1 million API keys and private user messages. Threat actors targeted the ecosystem with infostealers and other malware to achieve supply chain-scale compromise of OpenClaw users.
- So what? OpenClaw should not be used in enterprise workflows. Organisations should also ensure they have a process for assessing and allowlisting AI tools.
- Fourth-party incidents continue to harm downstream organisations – this month, the credentials of a fourth-party airport service portal provider, used by 200 airports globally, were exposed online.
- So what? Organisations should implement and regularly test incident response playbooks for third and fourth-party cyber incidents. Playbooks should cover both lost data and disruption scenarios.
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