Ammolite Insights: June 4, 2026
CYBERSECURITY NEWS, INSIGHTS & ANALYSIS
Grant-Funded CPCSC Readiness Support for Canadian Defence Suppliers
Canadian defence suppliers are facing growing expectations around cybersecurity readiness. As cybersecurity requirements continue to evolve across Canada's defence supply chain, organizations may be asked to demonstrate stronger cybersecurity controls, governance, documentation, and risk management practices to support defence-related contracts and opportunities.
Ammolite Security is accepting registrations for eligible organizations interested in grant-funded CPCSC Level 1 and Level 2 readiness support. Designed for defence contractors, subcontractors, manufacturers, technology firms, engineering companies, and critical infrastructure suppliers, the program may include CPCSC awareness training, readiness guidance, gap assessments, policy and documentation support, executive briefings, and practical next steps.
Your Biggest Cybersecurity Risk May Not Be Technology
Recent cybersecurity incidents involving organizations such as Charter Communications and Carnival Corporation have highlighted a growing reality: many cyberattacks begin with compromised accounts, phishing attempts, and social engineering tactics rather than sophisticated malware.
Cybercriminals continue to target employees and executives through deceptive emails, fake login pages, fraudulent phone calls, and other techniques designed to gain trust and access to sensitive systems and information.
Building cyber resilience requires more than technology. It requires informed employees, engaged leadership, and a culture of cybersecurity awareness throughout the organization.
Custom Corporate Cybersecurity Training from Ammolite Security helps organizations educate employees, strengthen cyber awareness, reduce human risk, and build a stronger first line of defence against evolving threats
In The News
Supply Chain Attack Hits 32 Red Hat NPM Packages
Hackers published 96 malicious package versions, injected with a credential-stealing worm similar to Mini Shai-Hulud.
CISA Adds Two Known Exploited Vulnerabilities to Catalog
CISA has added two new vulnerabilities to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalog, based on evidence of active exploitation.
New Ransomware Threat Group, ‘The Gentlemen,’ Has Become One of The Most Active Ransomware Operators
NTT researchers warn that the RaaS group is leveraging SystemBC malware to establish covert tunneling, evade detection, and support rapid lateral movement across enterprise environments.
