Risk Management stories
Local firms in regulated sectors can now keep identity security data onshore as scrutiny over machine and AI access intensifies.
Incorrect AI responses are already steering customers away, with Atlas finding factual errors in most brand profiles across major platforms.
The deal will back Ebury’s expansion into new markets while leaving Santander with a 55% stake in the cross-border payments fintech.
Businesses are racing to upgrade defences as Yubico says quantum computers could expose banking, health data and other records within years.
Operational gaps are emerging as most large companies push AI agents into production before staff believe they are ready.
Security teams can now validate scanner findings in minutes as Intruder rolls out AI agents to cut false positives and speed remediation.
The ranking highlights growing demand for governed AI tools in regulated sectors, where document control and auditability are becoming critical.
Technology leaders are being urged to tighten access controls as a Claude AI incident puts database safety and operational resilience under scrutiny.
Fraud teams facing faster AI-driven attacks can now update defences within hours as Sumsub’s detector learns new deepfake tactics automatically.
The new framework aims to curb fraud and unauthorised purchases as AI agents start making payments on behalf of shoppers.
It lets developers use AI coding tools without pasting sensitive credentials into prompts, reducing the risk of secrets leaking into logs or source control.
Security teams may get faster risk rankings as TrendAI adds Claude Opus 4.7 to its platform to spot exploitable flaws and apply interim controls.
Regulated firms can now run AI inside existing workflow systems as Nintex’s latest K2 update keeps sensitive data off external services.
Continuity at the top is meant to steady oversight of New Zealand’s payments infrastructure, which underpins billions of dollars in activity each year.
Public sector buyers in New Zealand gain a marketplace option for tighter email controls as phishing and impersonation keep driving cyber risk.
Most firms are deploying AI agents without proper oversight, leaving non-human identities exposed as security teams race to catch up.
The findings add pressure on ministers to modernise the 1990 Computer Misuse Act as breaches hit 43% of UK businesses and 28% of charities.
Phishing, supplier risks and weak staff training are still leaving UK firms exposed, experts warn after the latest government survey.
Housing teams facing tighter compliance checks can use a new tool that cites housing-specific sources to support decisions and inspections.
The hire underscores how support quality can sway renewals and growth as cyber buyers demand help with deployment and integration.