AI Adoption stories
Australian users can now automate office tasks across apps and files as OpenAI rolls out ChatGPT Work and GPT-5.6 nationwide.
Half of Australians now use generative AI, giving brands less than two years to shape how systems describe them to customers.
Enterprises can now control both chatbot and agent traffic through one gateway as Citrix expands NetScaler for regulated AI deployments.
Businesses are being urged to tighten controls as AI tools spread faster than governance, with Quorum Cyber updating assessments to cut cyber risk.
The deal gives Saicon more specialist talent as enterprises race to link AI projects with cloud, data and physical operations.
Pressure from new AI rules is pushing UK firms in finance, healthcare and defence to demand systems that are secure, auditable and sovereign.
Weak data and governance are leaving most UK mid-market AI projects stuck in pilots, despite 91% of firms saying they are ready to scale.
Gartner's latest reports flag data governance as a barrier to production AI, after CUBIG was named a Sample Provider and Tech Innovator.
Mounting scrutiny over AI budgets is pushing software teams to prove whether the tools speed delivery enough to justify their cost.
The rollout could help more than 1,500 institutions use generative AI on trusted in-house data without disrupting core banking operations.
Businesses are now weighing whether AI can cut workloads and risks in core operations, rather than just speed up pilots and paperwork.
Breaches are hitting lenders harder as AI adoption speeds up, with 98 per cent of affected firms saying the impact was material.
AI is making clients better informed before they meet advisers, shifting the value of lawyers towards judgement, challenge and risk transfer.
AI hiring is spreading unevenly across revenue teams, with senior roles and Sydney adverts most likely to mention the skill.
Poor data and supply chain fragility are slowing AI rollouts, with most Australian chief executives saying procurement is holding back adoption.
The tie-up aims to speed adoption of AHOY's physical AI tools across transport, utilities and government customers in North America.
While discovery is already mainstream, 45% of Hong Kong shoppers still balk at letting AI complete purchases, the survey found.
Yet only 8% of investors in Singapore said AI drove their last major decision, underscoring demand for human validation.
The top ranking signals growing demand for university AI that can manage sensitive data, automate admin work and scale across campus systems.
More than half of UK workers still lack basic digital skills, making AI literacy a growing hiring priority for employers.