A reference library on threat, behaviour and the human side of security. Written for the people who carry the responsibility, and meant to be read in any order.
Why the human factor, not the device or the policy, is usually where a compromise begins.
Behavioural indicators mean little on their own. Their value comes entirely from the context in which they are weighed.
An honest account of the boundaries of the discipline, and why those boundaries are a feature, not a weakness.
A look at the work behind the report, and why the most useful findings are about how weaknesses combine.
The value of a physical test is not whether a door opens. It is understanding why it was openable.
No single public detail is dangerous. The risk is in how readily the pieces can be assembled.
Language carries more than its content. Structured linguistic analysis reads the signals around the words.
When accuracy and consistency matter and the stakes are high, credibility assessment offers structure without overreach.
A secure facility can be compromised long before anyone moves in. The construction phase is a window that technical controls alone do not cover.
Detection tells you that something happened. Behavioural intelligence helps explain how, and how to prevent the next.
The most capable internal teams are the ones that know the limits of what they can do themselves.