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We Made Everything Faster. We Never Defined Better. | Lens Four by Sean Martin | Read by TAPE9

Episode Summary

At Infosecurity Europe 2026, the whole floor agreed on the vocabulary: outcomes, resilience, sovereignty, human-in-the-loop, while almost none of it could define what success actually looks like. This edition of Lens Four argues the go-to-market caught up to the language, the capability did not, and machine speed just removed the last place to hide the question.

Episode Notes

⬥EPISODE NOTES⬥

Almost every booth at Infosecurity Europe 2026 had settled on the same four words. Outcomes. Resilience. Sovereignty. Human in the loop. The messaging had grown up, more tempered than RSAC, more honest in its European register. The tell was quieter — almost none of it could connect those words to a definition of success a buyer could actually verify.

Strip away the polish and the show floor was a working argument about what the cybersecurity market is for, at the exact moment the clock that governs it collapsed to seconds. The go-to-market caught up to the language. The capability did not. This is the prove-it problem, and it is worth pulling apart clearly.

In this edition of Lens Four:

🔹 Why the quiet vocabulary convergence mattered more than any single product launch — outcomes, resilience, sovereignty, and human in the loop became the words everyone said, and almost none could tie them to a definition of success a buyer could verify

🔹 The number that should reorganize every SOC — the jump from initial access to the next stage collapsing from 8 hours to 22 seconds, with ransomware finishing in under an hour, most often on a Wednesday night

🔹 How Qualys reframed measurement itself — a client environment of 62 million risk findings cut to under 1% that could actually be executed, because the dashboard was never the deliverable, remediation was

🔹 Why Corelight put the same test on the detection itself — a black box tells you little, so keep the data behind every alert in the open and let an analyst prove what it actually is, the way one proof of value surfaced unencrypted sensitive traffic in 30 minutes

🔹 How Sumo Logic showed the repeatable version — prove a fix once, then let an agent apply that proven fix across 599 identical machines under human oversight, and its move into the AWS European Sovereign Cloud put something concrete under the week's sovereignty talk

🔹 What the criminal economy revealed as the honest mirror — an underground market for AI attack tools that went from 38 posts to over 1,400 in two months, tiered and redundant, an AI call center for hire that sounds like SaaS

🔹 Why the board's only real question, are we okay, now lands on the CISO as personal liability, just as AI moves from experimentation to deployment inside the organization

🔹 How consolidation and absorption are sorting the floor — 40-plus tools in silos, "make us relevant" becoming an executive hire, and the 12-to-18-month reckoning where AI absorbs functions that fill today's expo hall

🔹 The tell underneath all of it — when every booth converges on the same three or four words, the words stop doing the one job language has at a trade show: helping a buyer tell two things apart

Fourth Lens: The vocabulary moved faster than the products underneath it. The industry repositioned around outcomes without ever defining the outcome, and the bill comes due over the next 12 to 18 months, not because AI arrives, but because AI removes the last place to hide the question. Naming the outcome was the easy part. Proving it repeats, across environments and teams and budgets that share nothing but the problem, is the part the vocabulary skipped. When the story can no longer be rounded up, are we okay, and can you prove it twice?

🥁 🎶 A very big THANK YOU to our Infosecurity Europe 2026 Full Coverage Sponsors: Corelight · Qualys · Sumo Logic 👏 👏 👏

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Sean Martin is a cybersecurity market analyst, content strategist, and go-to-market advisor with more than 30 years of experience across engineering, product development, marketing, and media. He is co-founder of ITSPmagazine and Studio C60, host of the Redefining CyberSecurity Podcast and Music Evolves Podcast, and co-host of On Location and Random and Unscripted. Learn more at seanmartin.com.

Keywords: Infosecurity Europe 2026, cybersecurity go-to-market, security marketing, vendor positioning, machine-speed attacks, agentic AI, ransomware economics, post-quantum cryptography, boardroom liability, digital sovereignty, security tool consolidation, network detection and response, mean time to resolve, threat intelligence, resilience, Sean Martin, Lens Four