Today, we pause to remember the brave men and women who gave their lives in service to our country.
May we never forget their courage, their service, and the families who carry their legacy forward.
Customer data privacy rules are changing fast, and small businesses are not exempt.
In this video, Mike Wilson from COMNEXIA explains why recent enforcement actions against General Motors and Netflix should matter to every business owner. These cases are not just about large corporations. They are a warning sign that state privacy laws are becoming a real compliance issue for companies of all sizes.
Right now, 19 states have comprehensive data privacy laws on the books, and enforcement is increasing. If your business collects customer names, emails, phone numbers, payment information, employee records, vehicle GPS data, security footage, or other personal information, you need to understand what data you have, how long you keep it, and what your software vendors are allowed to do with it.
In this video, we cover:
What the GM and Netflix cases tell us about data privacy enforcement
Why state privacy laws matter even if you are a small business
The importance of knowing what customer data your business collects
Why every business should have a basic data retention policy
How software vendors may create hidden privacy and compliance risks
This is not about fear. It is about being prepared before these rules create a bigger problem for your business.
Need help reviewing your data, vendors, or security policies? Contact COMNEXIA.
COMNEXIA
Technology That Works For Your Business
#DataPrivacy #SmallBusiness #Cybersecurity #Compliance #BusinessTechnology #CustomerData #PrivacyLaws #COMNEXIA
https://t.co/4mfdD3FED8
Cyber threats are changing fast, and small businesses are no longer flying under the radar.
In this video, Mike Wilson, founder of COMNEXIA, breaks down three cybersecurity risks every business owner needs to understand right now:
AI-powered phishing emails that are harder to spot than ever
Security tool overload where businesses have tools, but no one watching them
Weak or untested recovery plans that leave companies exposed after ransomware or data loss
During National Small Business Week, NIST released new cybersecurity guidance aimed directly at small and mid-sized businesses. The message is clear: small businesses are now a major target.
The good news is that these problems are solvable. You do not need a massive enterprise budget. You need a clear plan, the right security tools, proper monitoring, and a realistic recovery strategy.
If you own or manage a business, this is worth two minutes of your time.
Subscribe for practical IT and cybersecurity advice for business owners, executives, and decision-makers.
#Cybersecurity #SmallBusiness #AIPhishing #Ransomware #BusinessIT #COMNEXIA #CyberThreats #DataProtection #ManagedITServices
https://t.co/shVm7YtEj0
Rising tech prices are forcing many businesses to delay laptop, server, and hardware refreshes. That may feel like a smart budget move, but old hardware can quickly become a cybersecurity risk.
In this video, Mike Wilson explains why holding onto aging business technology can create bigger problems than the original price increase, especially when older devices can no longer run current operating systems, security updates, or modern patch management tools.
We cover:
The real risk behind delaying hardware refreshes
Why outdated servers and laptops increase ransomware exposure
How Microsoft security patches affect business risk
When cloud migration makes more sense than replacing hardware
Why warranty coverage, maintenance, and automated patching matter
How a short-term budget decision can turn into a major outage or breach
The tariffs may increase the cost of new technology, but an unpatched system can cost far more if it leads to downtime, data loss, or ransomware.
If your business is delaying hardware upgrades because of price increases, now is the time to review your exposure and decide what should move to cloud, what should be replaced, and what needs stronger patch management.
Mike Wilson
COMNEXIA Corporation
Helping businesses make smarter technology, cybersecurity, and cloud decisions.
#Cybersecurity #SmallBusinessIT #Ransomware #ManagedIT #HardwareRefresh #Microsoft365 #CloudStrategy #ITSecurity #BusinessTechnology #COMNEXIA
https://t.co/KO3c8L2lbC
As cyberattacks on U.S. infrastructure continue to escalate, many small business owners still assume this is only a problem for governments, utilities, and large corporations. It is not. In this video, I break down why small businesses are now directly in the path of the same types of threats, especially when it comes to routers, firewalls, IP cameras, VoIP systems, remote access tools, and other internet-connected devices that often get overlooked.
I cover what is happening, why geopolitical conflict matters to your business even if you are not in a “critical infrastructure” industry, and what smart business owners should be doing right now to reduce risk. This is a practical look at how real-world cyber threats are moving closer to everyday businesses and how weak points inside an ordinary office can quickly become serious liabilities.
If your company depends on the internet, cloud systems, phones, cameras, remote access, or connected devices to stay operational, this is worth your attention.
Topics covered in this video:
• Why cyberattacks tied to global conflict are now affecting U.S. businesses
• How small businesses are exposed through common network and edge devices
• Why routers, cameras, and VoIP phones can become entry points
• What business owners should review right now to reduce exposure
• How to think about cyber risk in a more realistic and practical way
If you want help reviewing your business technology, cybersecurity posture, or infrastructure risk, reach out to COMNEXIA.
#Cybersecurity #SmallBusiness #BusinessSecurity #CyberAttack #InfrastructureSecurity #ManagedITServices #MSP #SmallBusinessIT #NetworkSecurity #BusinessContinuity
https://t.co/tcU1vSpQlK
AI Is Now Running IT Operations (And Most Companies Don’t Realize It Yet)
Artificial Intelligence is rapidly moving beyond chatbots and copilots. A new class of technology called AI agents is starting to run real IT operations inside companies around the world.
These systems monitor infrastructure, detect problems, analyze logs, and even fix issues automatically without waiting for a human engineer.
In this video we break down what AI agents are, how they work, and why they are beginning to transform the future of IT operations.
Most companies still think of AI as a productivity tool. But behind the scenes, AI is already starting to manage servers, cloud environments, security alerts, and infrastructure performance.
That raises a serious question.
If AI can run IT systems, what does that mean for businesses, IT teams, and the future of technology operations?
In this episode we cover:
• What AI agents actually are
• How autonomous IT operations work
• Real examples of AI managing infrastructure
• Why this shift is happening now
• The risks and security concerns companies need to understand
This is one of the most important technology trends happening right now, and most organizations haven’t realized how quickly it is advancing.
If you run a business, manage technology, or work in IT, this is something you need to understand.
#ArtificialIntelligence #AITechnology #FutureOfWork #ITOperations #AIRevolution
https://t.co/BCcbjphDSH
AI is changing the rules of cybersecurity and 2026 is the year the risks became impossible to ignore.
In this video, we break down two major shifts happening right now. First, artificial intelligence is fundamentally reshaping the cybersecurity threat landscape. Attackers are using AI to launch more sophisticated phishing, deepfake fraud, and adaptive malware at a speed that traditional defenses cannot match. At the same time, defenders are being forced to adopt AI-native security operations just to keep up.
https://t.co/6UkUHUd4iL
Second, recent large-scale platform outages have exposed a deeper problem inside the modern cloud model. A single failure in an AI-driven subsystem can ripple across global infrastructure, disrupting services for millions of users and businesses at once. This raises serious questions about platform centralization, systemic risk, and how resilient our digital economy really is.
We explain why these two trends are connected, what they mean for enterprises, and how IT leaders need to rethink architecture, security strategy, and risk management in an AI-driven world.
If you run a business, manage IT infrastructure, or make technology decisions, this is not theoretical. This is the operating environment of 2026.
Topics covered:
• How AI is accelerating cyber attack sophistication
• Why traditional security models are no longer enough
• The hidden fragility of centralized cloud platforms
• The rise of AI-native security operations and zero trust
• Why multi-cloud and decentralized architectures are gaining momentum
• What enterprise leaders should be doing right now to stay resilient
Subscribe for more deep dives on cybersecurity, cloud strategy, and the future of enterprise IT.
#Cybersecurity2026 #AIThreats #CloudFragility #ZeroTrust #DigitalResilience
Wishing our customers and partners a very Merry Christmas.
We appreciate your continued trust and partnership and look forward to what the new year brings.📷
You work hard to build a great business and service your customers. But if you are like many companies you need to focus on your core business leaving little time for innovation.
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Annual Corporate Christmas Party. It is a time to celebrate successes, motivate employees, prepare for the exciting things to come in the new business year, share delicious food and have the best time together.