Asset inventory tools and CAASM platforms fall short of true exposure management by relying on passive network monitoring and third-party APIs, missing silent devices, encrypted traffic, and deep vulnerability data. True exposure management requires combining vulnerability assessment, attack path analysis, identity risk, and AI security governance into a unified platform. The post contrasts passive discovery tools against Tenable One, which uses agents, active scanners, and passive listening to map 1.5 billion assets into attack paths, prioritize exploitable risks via AI-driven scoring, and govern AI workloads including shadow AI detection and prompt injection risks.
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Key takeaways1. Authoritative data vs. incomplete assumptions2. The frontier of risk: Securing the AI attack surface3. Seeing the unseen: Attack path analysis4. Compliance is not an “add-on”5. Risk scoring built on research, not just ticket routingComparison at a glance: Tenable One vs. IT asset-inventory software competitorsGet genuine exposure managementSort: