Cybersecurity
“We’re Being Outpaced by the Threat”: Canada’s New Cyber Defenders Say Training Isn’t Keeping Up
Toronto, ON —
July 27, 2025 — As Canada’s digital infrastructure rapidly modernizes, a new generation of cybersecurity professionals is entering the workforce — and many of them are sounding the alarm from inside the system.
ODTN News spoke with Kareem Nadir, a 26-year-old threat analyst working with the fictional Ontario Public Cyber Response Centre (OPCRC). Like many of his peers, Nadir completed his cybersecurity certification just two years ago. Now, he says, he’s fighting threats that no one taught him to expect.
“No One’s Teaching Us How to Fight What’s Actually Coming.”
Q: What’s the biggest gap in the training you received compared to the work you’re doing now?
A:
We were taught how to respond to known patterns — phishing, DDoS, ransomware playbooks. But what we’re seeing now? Multi-vector exploits that evolve mid-incident. Adversaries using generative AI to craft adaptive lures or pivot through federated cloud systems in ways that aren’t in the curriculum.
Q: Has training adapted at all to meet this shift?
A:
Not fast enough. The frameworks are good, but they’re outdated the moment they’re published. I’m not blaming the instructors — they’re doing their best. But we’re trying to secure quantum-hybrid infrastructure with PDF manuals written for on-prem Windows 10 endpoints.
“The Red Teams Are Simulating 2026 — We’re Still Being Taught 2019.”
Q: What about public-sector cyber drills or tabletop exercises — are they helping?
A:
Some of them, yes. But a lot of them feel like compliance theater. It’s hard to simulate asymmetric warfare in a four-hour roleplay. We need real training environments — adaptive, gamified, AI-driven simulations that replicate the chaos of a true breach. Because the adversaries we’re up against? They already have those tools.
“People Think We’re Hackers in Hoodies. We’re Firefighters With Outdated Maps.”
Q: What’s the public misunderstanding about people in your role?
A:
People think cybersecurity is one person in a basement running scripts. But really, it’s a team sprinting across broken infrastructure while someone rearranges the walls. And when things go wrong, we don’t have 24 hours — we have two minutes to make a decision that impacts hospitals, borders, or banks.
“If We Don’t Invest in Defender Training, We’ll Keep Playing Catch-Up.”
Q: What needs to change right now?
A:
National investment in immersive training. We need a Canadian Cyber Lab Network — real environments, updated constantly, connected across provinces. Let us train the way threat actors do: live, unpredictable, fast. We need tabletop exercises that simulate what a war room really looks like.
Otherwise? We’ll keep producing cyber defenders who are certified, but not prepared.
As cyber threats become more dynamic and deeply embedded in the systems that power everything from healthcare to national logistics, voices like Nadir’s are a stark reminder that Canada’s defensive posture is only as strong as its training pipeline. Without urgent investment in hands-on, next-gen education for frontline defenders, the country risks preparing yesterday’s professionals for tomorrow’s cyber wars — and falling behind before the breach even begins.
Watching the perimeter — and what slips past it. — Ayaan Chowdhury
Cybersecurity
Luxury Resort & Casino Hit by Ransomware, Employee HR Systems Compromised
February 25, 2026 — Luxury hospitality and gaming operator Silver Court Resorts confirmed late Tuesday night that a cyber intrusion led to the compromise of sensitive employee data, following what investigators describe as a quiet, multi-stage attack that unfolded over several weeks.
The attackers are demanding 21.8 BTC (≈ $1.6M CAD) in exchange for not publishing what they claim is more than 600GB of internal HR and payroll data. While guest booking systems, casino floors, and payment platforms remain operational, internal HR infrastructure has been taken offline as forensic teams continue containment efforts.
According to sources familiar with the investigation, the breach did not begin with ransomware. It began with credentials.
Timeline of the Intrusion
January 29 – Security logs show anomalous authentication attempts against Silver Court’s legacy VPN gateway.
January 31 – Successful login from an IP address previously linked to an infostealer malware campaign. Analysts believe credentials were harvested from a finance department employee whose laptop had been infected with a commodity infostealer strain.
February 2 – Attackers deploy a legitimate Remote Monitoring & Management (RMM) tool to establish persistence. The tool blended into normal administrative traffic.
February 4–10 – Lateral movement observed toward payroll and HR file servers. Privilege escalation achieved via misconfigured service account with domain admin rights.
February 12 – Large outbound data transfer (≈ 600GB) flagged but not immediately escalated.
February 14 – Ransom note discovered on internal HR systems.
Preliminary forensic analysis indicates that the compromised data includes employee names and addresses, Social Insurance Numbers, payroll records, direct deposit banking details, benefits enrollment information, and internal HR case documentation. Security officials state that no customer payment systems were directly accessed; however, investigators caution that employee PII breaches often become stepping stones for broader fraud operations.
Threat intelligence analysts warn that exposures of this nature frequently precede identity theft campaigns, business email compromise attempts, credential stuffing against internal and customer portals, and highly targeted social engineering attacks aimed at executives and finance teams.
Incident responders believe the attack chain began months earlier when credentials were harvested through an infostealer infection. From there, an unpatched VPN appliance allowed password-based access into the corporate network. Although MFA was reportedly enabled across most systems, it was not enforced on the legacy gateway used in the intrusion. Attackers then leveraged a legitimate RMM tool to maintain access and avoid traditional malware detection. Domain misconfigurations, including a service account with domain administrator privileges, enabled rapid privilege escalation once inside.
“This wasn’t flashy,” said one responder involved in the containment effort. “It was patient. Controlled. Each step looked normal on its own. The danger was in how the pieces fit together.”
The threat group, identifying itself as “Black Meridian,” has posted a countdown timer on a Tor-based leak site, claiming it will release employee payroll data within seven days if the ransom is not paid. The organization has not confirmed whether negotiations are underway, stating only that it is working with external forensic teams and law enforcement partners.
The incident underscores a recurring reality across the hospitality and gaming sector: when revenue platforms are hardened and segmented, attackers often pivot to internal systems where monitoring thresholds are lower and data is dense. HR environments, in particular, remain one of the most concentrated repositories of high-value information inside an enterprise.
In today’s threat landscape, attackers do not always go straight for customers. They start with the people behind the business.
Watching the perimeter — and what slips past it. — Ayaan Chowdhury
Cybersecurity
New Year’s Day Cloud Disruption at Kestralyn Solutions Exposes Gaps in Automation Oversight
A service disruption at Kestralyn Solutions, a Canadian company that provides cloud-based software used by businesses to manage supply chains, inventory, and delivery operations, unfolded on New Year’s Day, a period when many staff were on holiday and routine monitoring was operating under reduced coverage.
According to information reviewed by ODTN News, the incident followed a scheduled update to an automated cloud workflow responsible for managing infrastructure scaling and system health. The change was implemented through standard processes late on December 31 and initially appeared to function as expected.
In the early hours of January 1, customers began experiencing intermittent service disruptions and delayed system responses. Internal automation processes behaved inconsistently across regions, but with limited staff on duty, the issue was not immediately recognized as a systemic failure.
Investigators later determined the disruption was not the result of unauthorized access or malicious activity. Instead, a conflict between automated scaling logic and existing resource governance policies caused infrastructure resources to cycle repeatedly. The activity was technically valid and generated no security alerts, allowing the issue to persist longer than it otherwise might have during normal operating hours.
Operations teams on call initially interpreted the issue as a temporary performance fluctuation, a common occurrence during holiday traffic shifts. Without clear indicators of a broader control-plane failure, escalation was delayed until full staffing levels resumed later in the day.
By the time engineers isolated and corrected the automation workflow, multiple customer-facing services had been affected. The company later confirmed there was no data compromise but acknowledged that reduced staffing and limited cross-team visibility contributed to the delayed response.
Industry analysts say incidents occurring during holidays and long weekends are increasingly common, as cloud environments continue to operate at full scale even when organizations do not. Automation, while essential for managing modern infrastructure, can amplify small configuration issues when human oversight is limited.
The New Year’s Day incident at Kestralyn highlights a broader operational challenge facing many organizations. As reliance on cloud automation grows, preparedness can no longer assume full staffing or ideal conditions. Systems fail on holidays, during weekends, and in the early hours often when teams are least equipped to respond quickly.
For organizations entering 2026, the lesson is not simply about improving security controls, but about ensuring resilience during the moments when attention is lowest and systems are expected to run on their own.
Watching the perimeter — and what slips past it. — Ayaan Chowdhury
Cybersecurity
“This Isn’t Over” A Warning That Closed Out 2025
What began as a city-wide transit outage on December 4th has now become one of the most unsettling closing chapters of 2025.
As systems were gradually restored and commuters returned to platforms across the city, ODTN News received an anonymous message through its secure tip line. The message was brief, unverified, and deeply concerning:
“This isn’t over.”
Authorities have not confirmed the source of the message, nor whether it is directly linked to the transit disruption. But in the context of the past year, the warning has struck a nerve across the cybersecurity and emergency preparedness community.
The transit outage was not an isolated event. Throughout 2025, Canada experienced a string of disruptive incidents affecting critical systems once assumed to be resilient:
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Power grid instability impacting multiple regions
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Supply chain disruptions causing shortages and delays
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Transit shutdowns that stranded thousands of commuters
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Cascading technology failures that blurred the line between cyber and physical risk
Individually, each incident was treated as manageable. Collectively, they tell a different story…one of systems under sustained pressure, probing, and stress.
Several experts have raised concerns that these events resemble testing behaviours, where attackers observe response times, communication breakdowns, and public reaction rather than seeking immediate destruction.
Security analysts warn that the most dangerous outcome is not the attacks themselves, but the normalization of disruption.
“Each time we recover without meaningful reflection or preparation, we signal that disruption is acceptable,” said one crisis response advisor familiar with multiple 2025 incidents. “That’s what invites escalation.”
While investigations continue into the December transit outage, there is growing concern that Canada’s focus has leaned too heavily on response, restoring services quickly without equal investment in training, coordination, and realistic crisis preparation.
Across government agencies, private operators, and critical infrastructure providers, one issue keeps surfacing: many teams are encountering these scenarios for the first time during the crisis itself.
Experts argue that tabletop exercises, simulations, and cross-sector drills are no longer optional. They are essential tools to expose gaps before real-world consequences unfold.
Crisis preparation isn’t about predicting the exact next incident. It’s about ensuring leaders, operators, and communicators know how to function when uncertainty is high, information is incomplete, and public trust is on the line.
The anonymous message sent to ODTN News remains under review. Whether it was a provocation, a bluff, or something more deliberate is still unknown.
What is known is this: 2025 has revealed how interconnected and vulnerable Canada’s systems have become. Power, transit, supply chains, and digital infrastructure no longer fail in isolation. When one stumbles, others feel the impact.
As the country moves into 2026, the question is no longer if another disruption will occur, but whether organizations will be better prepared when it does.
Because if the message is true, if this really isn’t over then training, coordination, and crisis readiness may be the difference between disruption and disaster.
Watching the perimeter — and what slips past it. — Ayaan Chowdhury
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