Threat detection stories
The award highlights growing demand for biometric readers that add threat detection and watch-listing at entry points, beyond simple access checks.
Australian employers face a growing insider-threat risk as DTEX says North Korean operatives are applying under false identities for tech roles.
Teams can now block toxic or sensitive AI output before it reaches customer data, inboxes and other business systems.
Security teams risk missed attacks and slower investigations unless AI can see network traffic in motion across hybrid cloud environments.
Rising data volumes and AI are forcing Australian firms to cut storage waste, tighten governance and test backups before breaches hit.
The win could boost Jazz's profile with enterprise buyers as the accelerator drew nearly 1,000 applicants and sought AI-driven security tools.
Dormant implants in carrier systems could expose subscriber data and signals across Europe and APAC, Rapid7 warned.
As AI moves into production, enterprises face gaps between data governance and runtime controls that can expose sensitive information and policy breaches.
The malicious packages could leave build systems and Kubernetes clusters exposed, prompting checks across CI/CD pipelines and AI frameworks.
Nearly half of observed attacks never hit endpoints, pushing N-able to broaden detection across network, cloud and identity layers.
Distributed sites will get tighter controls as HPE adds AI prompt filtering, recovery and encryption updates to guard against data leakage and attacks.
The new reader lets sites add biometric checks and live threat detection without replacing existing doors, zoning or permission systems.
Security teams can now build custom AI agents in Falcon as CrowdStrike opens its platform to partners including Accenture, AWS and OpenAI.
Smaller firms could cut security costs as embedded detection and automated response reduce the need for extra hardware or specialist staff.
Enterprises could spot compromised maintainers sooner, as the new tool maps open-source contributors, dependencies and policy breaches across builds.
Mental health absences could have already cost cyber teams more than 250,000 work days, threatening monitoring and incident response.
Demand for round-the-clock cyber defence is pushing Slipstream Cyber to strengthen its operations as attacks become faster and more complex.
Most UK organisations lack full visibility of AI tools in use, leaving security teams slower to spot breaches and respond to incidents.
Only 42% of Australian organisations back up all workloads, leaving many exposed when ransomware or hardware failures hit.
Boards face mounting pressure to prove AI and automation improve service, resilience and compliance as Manchester Tech Week opens in Manchester Central.