Finite State today announced that Founder and CEO Matt Wyckhouse will lead a panel on “Designing Connected Devices with Security Built In” at 2:35–3:20 p.m. PT, May 19, 2026, at IoT Tech Expo North America. The conference, one of the industry’s largest gatherings focused on IoT, AI, cybersecurity, edge computing, and digital transformation, will be held at the San Jose McEnery Convention Center in San Jose, California, on May 18–19, 2026.
Leaders from Boeing, SmartTech Research, and EVRaid will join Wyckhouse in examining the evolving security risks facing connected devices, industrial systems, and software-driven products as AI adoption and regulatory pressure accelerate across the IoT ecosystem. Key focus areas of the panel include:
- Embedding security: Moving away from reactive, bolted-on security toward integrating protection at the design stage.
- Best practices: Implementing secure boot processes, hardware root of trust, and strong encryption.
- Long-term resilience: Strategies for continuous threat monitoring and ensuring security measures adapt as devices age.
Attendees will gain new insight into how manufacturers and technology providers can improve visibility into device software, manage vulnerabilities across product lines, and prepare for rapidly expanding global cybersecurity regulations impacting connected products.
Finite State Live Demonstrations
At Booth #47, the Finite State team will run live demonstrations of artifact-backed workflows that turn shipped software into audit-ready evidence:
- Unified product intelligence: Firmware, binaries, source, and supplier inputs connect into a complete, up-to-date system of record grounded in what actually ships.
- Exploitability-based prioritization: Reachability and context surface real exposure, with defensible rationale for what matters and what doesn’t.
- New CVE to impacted products: Vulnerability disclosure moves to impact analysis quickly, with consistent VEX decisions and traceable outputs across builds.
- Design-to-deployment traceability: Architecture, threats, risks, and requirements connect directly to deployed software and stay aligned as systems evolve.
- Continuous compliance outputs: SBOM, VEX, traceability, and audit-ready reports are generated automatically and stay current across releases.
Securing What Ships, at Portfolio Scale
The panel reflects a market reality: for connected-device manufacturers, securing what ships has become a portfolio-scale problem. Vendored components embedded in firmware rarely appear in source manifests, vulnerability volume outpaces manual triage, and the EU Cyber Resilience Act now enforces incident disclosure timelines as short as 24 hours.
The Finite State Product Security OS closes that gap by analyzing shipped firmware directly, prioritizing reachable risks over raw CVE counts, and maintaining one evidence trail per product version. Teams across medical, automotive, industrial, and consumer IoT use it to keep security and compliance current at release cadence. To discuss these capabilities directly, attendees interested in meeting with the Finite State team during the event can book a meeting on the Finite State IoT Tech Expo event page.
Microsoft Plans To Remotely Break Office 2019 And 2021 For Mac So That Users Can Only Open Files…. Is The Outrage Justified?
Posted in Commentary with tags Microsoft on May 16, 2026 by itnerdSo over the last few days, the Internet has been losing its mind over the fact that Microsoft on July 13 2026, Microsoft Office 2021 and 2019 for Mac will only be able to open files. But they cannot save them. This is documented here. And the reason for this is an expired certificate. If you want examples of how people are losing their minds over this, take this Reddit thread or this one to see what I am talking about.
But is the outrage justified? I am not sure because I can see this from both sides.
On one hand, Office 2019 for Mac has reached the end of support in October 2023. That means that it is not receiving security updates or bug fixes. Office 2021 for Mac will be in the same state in October 2026. So users realistically should be installing either Office 2024 or using Microsoft 365 as it’s never a good idea to run unsupported software as that’s a gateway for threat actors to pwn you.
On the other hand, many people on Reddit feel that this is anti consumer as comes across Microsoft deciding to effectively kill a license that they paid for. Also they feel that Microsoft could easily come out with a software update that addresses the certificate issue. But clearly they don’t want to do that. And forcing users to pay for an upgrade is good for Microsoft’s bank account.
Mac users have a few choices if they are in this situation:
A few random thoughts. I have said for years that that hell hath no fury as an Apple user scorned. Microsoft may be about to find this out shortly as this is unlikely to go away. Also, these Mac users who are outraged need to recognize that there are options for them and they should look into those alternatives ASAP. Because running these versions of Office is not going to be an option.
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