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SecurityScorecard Unveils TITAN AI: A New Era of Threat-Informed Third-Party Risk Management

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SecurityScorecard Unveils TITAN AI: A New Era of Threat-Informed Third-Party Risk Management
News

News

SecurityScorecard Unveils TITAN AI: A New Era of Threat-Informed Third-Party Risk Management

2026-03-23 21:01 Last Updated At:21:30

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mar 23, 2026--

RSA CONFERENCE 2026 —SecurityScorecard, the company redefining how organizations manage cyber risk across vendors, partners, and supply chains, today announced TITAN AI at the RSA Conference. TITAN AI replaces the reactive, manual grind of third-party risk management (TPRM) programs with AI-acceleration. This gives security teams continuous intelligence and automation to detect and respond to growing supply chain risk.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260323566577/en/

TITAN AI is built on top of SecurityScorecard’s industry-leading Ratings and TPRM platform with AI-driven technology and enhanced threat intelligence, delivering a powerful solution built for the demands of today’s risk landscape.

With TITAN AI, organizations will be able to automate the majority of the work traditionally required to manage vendor risk. TPRM, security, and risk teams will reclaim hours previously spent chasing vendors, managing spreadsheets, and manually reviewing assessments. By reducing manual effort by up to 95%, teams will scale their TPRM programs without hiring additional staff or increasing budget.

Organizations leveraging TITAN AI will identify and address third-party risk faster and more consistently. By continuously identifying exposures and enabling earlier remediation before incidents occur, TITAN AI will help customers achieve up to 75% fewer supply-chain breaches. At the same time, a 9x higher vendor engagement will allow vendors to respond more quickly and resolve issues before they escalate.

Because TITAN AI provides 99.9% accurate risk attribution with a near-zero refute rate, both internal teams and external vendors trust the findings. This gives security leaders the confidence to act quickly, strengthen compliance posture, and provide boards with clearer visibility into the organization’s cyber resilience.

The result isn’t just another tool; it fundamentally transforms traditional TPRM programs, providing teams a more scalable, resilient way to operate.

At the center is an operational clearinghouse that connects enterprises and vendors through a shared operational layer for third-party risk management, enabling both sides of the ecosystem to collaborate on risk detection, assessment, and remediation in real time.

This shared infrastructure enables organizations to move beyond passive monitoring to managing, detecting, and responding. Organizations will have incident workflows that allow enterprises and vendors to coordinate the moment critical exposures are discovered.

“We pioneered cybersecurity ratings to give organizations a clear, measurable way to understand and improve their cyber hygiene,” said Dr. Aleksandr Yampolskiy, CEO and Co-Founder of SecurityScorecard. “Today, we’re still redefining what’s possible. Many teams still spend too much time stuck in manual, compliance-driven processes that don’t actually reduce risk. TITAN AI is our answer to that problem.”

Introducing TITAN AI: Continuous, AI-Accelerated, Predictive Defense

Security teams are drowning in unanswered questionnaires and disconnected data that doesn’t give them the full picture of risk or translate into action. Even when risks are identified, remediation is slow and manual. Boards and regulators demand proof of risk reduction, yet existing tools offer insights without guarantees.

TITAN AI is organized into three offerings that take organizations from foundational visibility to active, threat-informed defense:

The Supply Chain Resilience Journey

Alongside TITAN AI, SecurityScorecard is introducing the Supply Chain Resilience Journey, an industry-first customer maturity model designed to help organizations understand exactly where their TPRM program stands today and how to advance it. The journey maps four progressive stages: Basic Diligence, Periodic TPRM, Continuous TPRM, and Threat-Informed TPRM.

Rather than prescribing a one-size-fits-all approach, SecurityScorecard meets customers exactly where they are, then provides AI-accelerated workflows, continuous intelligence, and expert services to help them evolve at their own pace. Whether an organization is still relying on spreadsheets or already running a mature continuous monitoring program, TITAN AI is designed to amplify what security teams have already built.

Availability

Organizations interested in modernizing their third-party risk management program can view a demonstration of the TITAN AI platform at RSA. For more information or to schedule a demonstration, visit SecurityScorecard at RSA Conference 2026 at Moscone North #6261 or visit https://securityscorecard.com/rsac-2026/.

About SecurityScorecard

SecurityScorecard is the global leader in threat-informed third-party risk management (TPRM), securing the world’s supply chains. The company delivers a threat-informed approach to TPRM that enables organizations to drive out risk at the source. The platform uses continuous visibility and AI-accelerated workflows to help organizations reduce third-party risk before incidents occur and respond with confidence when they do.

Trusted by over 3,300 organizations, including 70% of the Fortune 100, and recognized as a trusted resource by the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). Backed by Evolution Equity Partners, Silver Lake Partners, Sequoia Capital, Google Ventures, and Riverwood Capital, SecurityScorecard delivers end-to-end supply chain cybersecurity that safeguards business continuity.

Protect the supply chain behind your business. Learn more at securityscorecard.com.

SecurityScorecard Unveils TITAN AI: A New Era of Threat-Informed Third-Party Risk Management

SecurityScorecard Unveils TITAN AI: A New Era of Threat-Informed Third-Party Risk Management

ATLANTA (AP) — Federal immigration officers have been seen at an airport in Atlanta after President Donald Trump said he’d deploy agents to supplement the Transportation Security Administration during a government shutdown that has caused long lines at security checkpoints across the country.

On Monday morning, a handful of federal agents were seen by The Associated Press near busy lines at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

Federal agents are a routine presence at international airports, where Customs and Border Protection officers screen arriving travelers and Homeland Security Investigations agents handle criminal cases tied to smuggling, trafficking and fraud.

What’s unusual in the current moment is their visibility at TSA security checkpoints, a role typically handled by transportation security officers rather than federal investigators.

Hundreds of thousands of Homeland Security workers, including from the TSA, U.S. Secret Service and Coast Guard, have worked without pay since Congress failed to renew DHS funding last month.

Some fear the move to deploy federal immigration agents will only escalate tensions.

Trump said Sunday he would order federal immigration agents to airports to assist TSA by guarding exit lanes or checking passenger IDs unless Democrats agreed to fund the Department of Homeland Security. Funding for the department lapsed Feb. 14 as Democrats refused to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement as well as Customs and Border Protection without changes to their operations in the wake of the deaths of Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minneapolis.

Democrats are continuing to demand major changes to federal immigration operations — including policy changes that would require ICE agents to get a warrant from a judge before forcefully entering homes, the removal of masks and clear identifying information on uniforms.

Trump on Monday directed ICE officers not to wear face coverings in their work at airports. In a social media posted, Trump said he supports ICE officers wearing masks when dealing with “hardened criminals” but suggested it isn’t necessary when assisting with the “MESS at the airports.”

Grantham-Philips reported from New York. Associated Press writer Collin Binkley in Washington contributed to this report.

Federal immigration agents are seen at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Emilie Megnien)

Federal immigration agents are seen at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Emilie Megnien)

People wait in long TSA security lines at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in the Queens borough of New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Ryan Murphy)

People wait in long TSA security lines at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in the Queens borough of New York, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Ryan Murphy)

Federal immigration agents are seen at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Emilie Megnien)

Federal immigration agents are seen at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Emilie Megnien)

A federal immigration agent is seen as people wait in a TSA line at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Emilie Megnien)

A federal immigration agent is seen as people wait in a TSA line at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Emilie Megnien)

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