KiloClaw vs. Shadow AI: Why Autonomous Agent Governance Just Became an Enterprise Must‑Have

Somewhere in your organization right now, an always-on bot is probably reading Slack, watching a Jira board, skimming build logs, and quietly doing “helpful” things with API keys that were never meant to live outside a vault. It might even be competent. That’s the problem. On April 2, 2026, AI News (TechForge Publications) published a…

How Giant Swarm Live‑Migrated Hundreds of Kubernetes Clusters to Cluster API (Without Downtime)

If you’ve ever tried to migrate “just one” production Kubernetes cluster, you know the universe immediately responds with: that’s cute. Now scale that up to hundreds of clusters, across enterprise customer environments, with no downtime, no data loss, and without the luxury of “we’ll just rebuild it and restore from backup.” That’s the story Giant…

Typosquatting Hits Windsurf IDE: How a Fake VS Code Extension Used Solana as a Malware Dead Drop (and What DevSecOps Should Do Next)

On April 3, 2026, DevOps.com published a short-but-spicy warning: a typosquatting campaign has landed inside the Windsurf IDE extension ecosystem, and it isn’t just trying to mess with your syntax highlighting. It’s trying to steal credentials and developer data, using the Solana blockchain as a resilient payload delivery mechanism. The original DevOps.com item was written…

Why Cloudflare Is Rethinking CDN Cache for the AI Era (and What It Means for Everyone Else)

Somewhere in a Cloudflare point-of-presence (PoP), a perfectly innocent cache server is trying to do what caches have always done: keep popular stuff close to users so the Internet feels snappy. Then an AI crawler shows up and behaves like a sleep-deprived intern with unlimited energy drinks, opening every door in the building just to…

CBP Facility Codes on Quizlet: When Study Flashcards Turn Into an OPSEC Incident

On April 3, 2026, WIRED published one of those stories that makes every security officer, compliance manager, and “please don’t put that on the internet” trainer simultaneously sigh and reach for a stress ball: a set of public Quizlet flashcards appeared to contain what looked like access codes and other operational details related to US…

Kubernetes v1.36 Sneak Peek: The Security-First Release That’s Quietly Rewiring Your Cluster

Kubernetes is about to do that thing it does best: change just enough to keep platform teams employed, while simultaneously making clusters faster, safer, and—if we’re honest—slightly more confusing for anyone who hasn’t read release notes since the last decade. On March 30, 2026, the Kubernetes project published a preview post titled Kubernetes v1.36 Sneak…

5 Best Practices to Secure AI Systems (and Why “Just Add MFA” Isn’t a Strategy)

Artificial intelligence has a talent for making us feel simultaneously futuristic and slightly irresponsible. You can deploy an AI assistant that drafts customer emails in six languages, summarizes incident reports, and writes Terraform that mostly works on the first try. And then—because we can’t have nice things—it also opens up new ways to leak data,…

Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order Heads for a Likely Loss at SCOTUS — But the “Papers, Please” Machinery Is Already Built

On April 1, 2026, the US Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara, a case that could reshape one of America’s most fundamental legal defaults: that nearly everyone born on US soil is a citizen. The justices sounded skeptical of the Trump administration’s attempt to narrow the Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship Clause. But even…

Artemis, Moon Bases, and a Legal Gray Zone: Why NASA’s Lunar “Safety Zones” Could Become the Next Big Space Fight

NASA’s Artemis program is back in the spotlight, and not just because watching a giant rocket leave Florida is one of the few universally accepted forms of therapy. The bigger story is what comes after the fireworks: a sustained human presence on the Moon and, eventually, something that looks a lot like a Moon base.…

Scaleway Containers Gets Initial Support for a HashiCorp Waypoint Plugin: What It Means for Serverless Deployments (and Your Sanity)

Scaleway slipped a very developer-friendly item into its documentation changelog: initial support for a Waypoint plugin for its Containers product. In plain English, that means teams who still like HashiCorp’s “waypoint up” workflow can now point it at Scaleway Serverless Containers with a first-party plugin and a repeatable configuration file, instead of stitching together bespoke…