Risk Management stories
Pressure is growing on AI vendors and software suppliers to improve vulnerability disclosure as experts warn basic CVE details are no longer enough.
Companies adopting foundation models are being urged to rethink defences as Protegrity’s new tool aims to shield sensitive data during inferencing.
Banks and security firms will test how advanced AI cyber tools can aid defence without widening the risk of offensive misuse.
The update promises better software engineering and longer task handling for users, while keeping Claude Opus 4.7 at the same price.
Most North American SMBs now buy cyber insurance, as repeated breaches and insurer-imposed controls reshape how they manage risk.
The platform aims to spare regulated customers costly rebuilds as federal cryptography, hardening and quantum-resistant rules tighten from September 2026.
Most firms are revising incentives quarterly, but many still need up to two months to implement changes, a report says.
OpenClaw users will be able to let AI agents pay with existing cards as Mastercard's controls add limits, authentication and audit trails.
Power and water operators will gain OT-specific patching tools as Emerson adds OPSWAT technology to its Ovation platform globally.
Many firms are failing to turn AI trials into production systems, with poor controls and weak data forcing almost half of projects to stall.
Employers face a rising risk of criminal probes and reputational damage as new scans flag illegal child abuse imagery on work devices.
Banks are under pressure to modernise legacy systems and prove where AI can improve service, risk control and security at scale.
Executives may gain earlier warnings on costs and operational risks as Dcycle’s new AI system joins financial, supplier and ESG data.
Managed service providers could cut manual effort and false compliance alerts as the update tightens asset links across security tools.
Trust concerns are pausing nearly half of planned AI spending at medium and large firms, with explainability now outweighing regulatory uncertainty.
Only 58% of UK tech staff have formal AI training, leaving daily users exposed to errors, privacy risks and weak oversight.
Rising storms, labour shortages and cargo fires are increasing costs and disruption for Asian shipping firms, QBE warns.
Employers could face faster detection of illegal content on staff devices as the new tool flags known abuse material without exposing reviewers to images.
Custom-built agents could leave Irish boards carrying the full cost of AI errors, with fines and compliance failures possible under EU rules.
The £500 million fund is meant to help British AI start-ups scale, as ministers seek growth and greater control over core technology.