Data Security stories
Businesses gain an AI-enabled contact centre with omnichannel support, as Cox Business broadens its portfolio beyond traditional telecoms services.
Rising identity-based attacks and exposed cloud services are forcing Australian organisations to rethink security assumptions as threats accelerate.
Organisations can now run AI workloads on sensitive data without exposing it to the cloud provider, as Niobium opens The Fog in private beta.
It aims to cut Google Drive and Gmail recovery from days to minutes, as firms face growing cyber and outage risk from cloud collaboration tools.
Rising automation and data growth are exposing cloud users to identity drift, hidden telemetry gaps and fragmented defences.
Security teams face a wider gap as enterprise AI moves into production, with data governance and runtime controls often managed separately.
Organisations face fresh breach and privacy exposure as autonomous AI agents gain access to tools, data and records across their systems.
Nutanix Kubernetes Platform users can now add CloudCasa tools for backup, recovery and migration across on-premises, edge and cloud sites.
Despite recession fears, most global leaders plan to keep AI spending high, with average budgets set at USD $186 million over the next year.
Despite recession fears, 74 per cent of senior executives still plan to keep AI near the top of budgets, KPMG found.
Australian developers can now access free vulnerability tools as Vulnetix takes a formal role in global software flaw tracking.
Widespread AI use in accountancy is stoking fears over client data, GDPR breaches and disciplinary action as firms chase convenience over controls.
Fragmented patient data is still slowing care and adding to doctors’ workload, with 71% saying better interoperability would help most.
Despite widespread AI backups, just 39% of UK businesses are fully confident they could recover cloud data after a cyberattack.
Partners can now sell voice, messaging and AI-led service tools in 170 markets as the Sydney-founded firm expands overseas.
Backed by its founders, the AI venture is targeting firms struggling to turn pilots into measurable gains as demand grows across regulated industries.
The pilot could ease pressure on Ontario hospitals by spotting deterioration in seniors at home before conditions worsen.
Concern over privacy is rising as 65% of employees say their personal data may be used to train AI tools, the survey found.
Banks and advisers face a bigger security test as open banking will let more AI tools handle live client data from mid-2026.
Thousands of smaller firms should gain easier access to loan comparisons, payment tools and cashflow apps as banks widen data sharing by 2027.