United Kingdom (UK) stories
The UK industrial AI company is stepping up its North American push as it seeks to turn existing US customers into broader revenue growth.
Organisations across EMEA want AI-ready storage without disruptive rebuilds, as rising data volumes and resilience demands strain ageing data centres.
The renewal will help LSEG bolster resilience and security across regulated market systems as it deepens use of VMware Cloud Foundation.
Corporate legal teams are using AI to scrutinise bills more tightly, pushing law firms' invoice rejection rates from 11% to 18% in 2025.
Only 12% of organisations have fully integrated tax technology, leaving compliance projects exposed as e-invoicing rules tighten.
The shortlist spotlights accessibility, mixed-reality and public-interest software that could gain more visibility on the App Store and beyond.
The tie-up could help regulated firms move AI agents from pilots to live workflows, using trusted data for checks, approvals and governance.
Routine call-handling jobs face the sharpest risk as AI agents take over most customer queries, forcing firms to retrain staff quickly by 2030.
Industrial operators may get faster AI access to plant and business data, as the deal avoids copying information into separate systems.
Most executives still rely on artificial intelligence to draft emails and summarise documents, despite rising confidence and training uptake.
Long delays on firewall changes could ease as the new system automates policy work across complex hybrid networks with human oversight.
Shoppers in Britain now have another route to cheaper goods as a German price comparison group enters a crowded UK eCommerce market.
The hire comes as live facial recognition in British shops faces mounting scrutiny over privacy, accountability and safeguards for shoppers and staff.
Faster quotes and tighter margin control are helping Marshalls win tenders in the UK building materials market as it shifts pricing to AI.
Human oversight remains a red line for many policyholders, with only 30% of UK consumers happy for insurers to use AI on pricing decisions.
Local groups in host areas can now seek grants of up to GBP £5,000 for projects after Cellnex UK earmarked GBP £180,000 in year one.
Students will use visual modelling software to tackle complex legal and regulatory problems as Ulster University reshapes legal training for the AI era.
UK SMEs can now take contactless card payments on smartphones, with settlement into Starling accounts arriving the next day.
Safely embedding AI into public services now hinges on clearer accountability, as only 22% of Australian organisations use advanced governance models.
TrustedTech said 62% of UK senior leaders use unauthorised AI tools at work, intensifying worries over data leaks and policy breaches.