ISMG Editors: No Honor Among Ransomware Thieves

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Operational Brief

The article discusses how cybercriminals may be turning on each other in the ransomware market; it also covers security leaders' perspectives on machine identities and AI risks, as well as changes in U.S.-Europe dynamics affecting technology resilience and digital sovereignty.

Why It Matters for Texas Credit Unions

The article does not explicitly mention Texas or any Texas-specific entities. The content is more broadly relevant to the cybersecurity landscape but lacks direct applicability to Texas credit unions.

Who this most likely affects

Bounded site guidance: This item is most likely relevant for credit unions with material information-security, technology, or vendor-management exposure.

Why this fit: The source language points to cyber, technology, or third-party oversight risk.

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Original Source Material

Also: AI, Machine Identity Risks; Europe’s Digital Sovereignty Push In this week's panel, four ISMG editors examined how cybercriminals may be turning on each other, what security leaders are really saying about machine identities and AI risk, and how shifting U.S.-Europe dynamics are reshaping technology resilience and digital sovereignty.