Flashpoint has published a new blog post on how Primary Source Collection (PSC) enables intelligence teams to surface emerging fraud and threat activity before it reaches scale. The article explores:
- How Threats Actually Evolve
- Why Static Collection Falls Short
- A Different Model: Primary Source Collection
- Making Intelligence Taskable
- How Taskable Collection Works in Practice
Why does this matter? Threat and fraud operations are moving faster than ever. Barriers to entry are lower. Tooling is more accessible. Collaboration rivals legitimate software development cycles. Defenders cannot afford to move slower than the adversaries they are trying to stop.
Primary Source Collection is how intelligence teams keep pace. It aligns collection with mission needs, enables real-time tasking, and delivers insight early enough to change outcomes instead of just documenting them. The signals have always been there – what has changed is the ability to surface them while they still matter.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Related
This entry was posted on December 22, 2025 at 4:14 pm and is filed under Commentary with tags Flashpoint. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Surfacing Threats Before They Scale: Why Primary Source Collection Changes Intelligenc
Flashpoint has published a new blog post on how Primary Source Collection (PSC) enables intelligence teams to surface emerging fraud and threat activity before it reaches scale. The article explores:
Why does this matter? Threat and fraud operations are moving faster than ever. Barriers to entry are lower. Tooling is more accessible. Collaboration rivals legitimate software development cycles. Defenders cannot afford to move slower than the adversaries they are trying to stop.
Primary Source Collection is how intelligence teams keep pace. It aligns collection with mission needs, enables real-time tasking, and delivers insight early enough to change outcomes instead of just documenting them. The signals have always been there – what has changed is the ability to surface them while they still matter.
Share this:
Like this:
Related
This entry was posted on December 22, 2025 at 4:14 pm and is filed under Commentary with tags Flashpoint. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.