When Luigi Mangione became a folk hero, something shifted. The Kimberly-Clark arson is what that shift looks like inside your organization.
When Luigi Mangione became a folk hero, something shifted. The Kimberly-Clark arson is what that shift looks like inside your organization.
Most security guidance tells you what to do. This piece asks why it should work—and offers an IR-adapted framework to stress-test your strategy’s logic.
Hacked surveillance cameras helped plan the assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader. The corporate security lesson has nothing to do with geopolitics.
Sending employees into high-risk environments creates real legal exposure. Here is what a genuine duty of care framework looks like for your organization.
Proven in Afghanistan, applied to boardrooms. Pattern of Life analysis is the intelligence methodology your corporate security program is missing.
How surveillance experience informs protective intelligence, threat vulnerability assessments, and recognizing risk before incidents occur.
A protective intelligence analysis of doxxing, explaining how public data becomes weaponized and why it is a critical pre-incident risk indicator.
Security doesn’t change by building type. Principles stay constant; context changes. Why capability, not facility labels, should guide security decisions.
HUMINT and OSINT aren’t interchangeable. Blurring the line creates false confidence, weak analysis, and real-world risk.
Cameras are tools, not strategies. Learn what decades of research reveal about surveillance effectiveness—and why people, values, and context drive real security outcomes.