AI Adoption stories
Boards are being pushed to rethink data platforms and cyber controls as AI adoption exposes Australian firms to faster attacks and stricter governance demands.
Rising burnout and weak engagement are forcing employers to rethink productivity, as leaders say simpler systems could lift output without longer hours.
Customers now expect support across cloud, security and AI as the Sydney-based group uses its broader footprint to meet changing needs.
Australian firms are increasingly using AI in day-to-day operations, with leaders saying data quality and human oversight now matter more than pilot projects.
As firms roll out AI and new systems, the real test is whether staff keep using them after launch enthusiasm fades.
Nearly half of Zip's Australian customers now use AI to compare and research purchases, but most still want to make the final call themselves.
Hackers are exploiting vulnerabilities in hours or minutes, leaving many organisations compromised before defenders spot the breach.
Security teams gain tighter endpoint oversight of shadow AI and sensitive data, as Fortinet folds new controls into FortiEndpoint from the third quarter.
Enterprises could see better GPU use as the partnership aims to cut data delays that slow AI training, inference and analytics.
Only four in 10 Singapore professionals surveyed felt able to spot AI-generated misinformation, prompting a year-long reading push.
Data quality is overtaking AI as a top concern in 2026, with CDOs under pressure to prove the information behind automated decisions is trustworthy.
Defenders face shorter patching windows as Check Point says AI can now turn new flaws into working exploits within hours.
Rising pressure on learning leaders to prove AI returns has kept NIIT Learning at the top of Fosway's digital learning assessment for a second year.
Firms say the bigger payoff now lies in embedding AI into logistics, security and data systems, while poor governance leaves firms exposed.
As AI adoption lifts demand for observability tools, New Relic is betting on a veteran sales leader to expand its reach with large customers.
Public confidence may decide whether generative AI delivers up to USD $76 billion for New Zealand by 2038, TUANZ said.
As AI spreads through core business functions, executives warn weak oversight could expose firms to deepfakes, fraud and costly incidents.
Many workers are being left to learn AI on their own, with junior staff far less confident than senior leaders, a survey shows.
Local language support and mobile-first use have helped drive Gemini adoption across a region where younger users are setting the pace.
Only 12% of UK companies qualify as AI leaders, with most still struggling to turn pilot projects into measurable returns.