“AI-powered” has become the default label for every security tool on the market. But there’s a meaningful difference between a tool that uses AI to generate alerts after the fact and one that actively participates in development, preventing vulnerabilities as code is written. That difference is what separates reactive AI from agentic AI. And it matters more now than ever. What “Agentic” Actually Means in AppSec In the context of application security, agentic AI isn’t a buzzword. It describes a specific set of capabilities: the tool proactively surfaces security issues in real time, understands the context in which code is being written, and recommends fixes before insecure patterns reach the pipeline. The developer still makes the call. But instead of finding out about a vulnerability hours or days after committing it, they get guidance at the moment they can act on it most efficiently. Three qualities define the approach. Agentic AI is proactive, performing inline validation as...
Operations in DevOps is not just about keeping systems up anymore. Teams now have to support faster releases, manage cloud-native environments, improve security, and keep services reliable at scale. That is a big shift. Operations is no longer a back-office function. It plays a direct role in how fast and how safely the business can move. New technology has made this easier in some ways. Tools like Infrastructure as Code, observability platforms, and AIOps can reduce manual work and give teams better control. But they also add complexity. More tools do not automatically mean better operations. Many teams still deal with alert fatigue, messy handoffs, and too much operational noise. That is why modern operations need a different approach. The goal is not to add more processes. It is to build systems that are easier to run, easier to monitor, and easier to improve. In DevOps, good operations means less toil, better visibility and faster recovery when things go wrong. In this artic...