Public Sector stories
Stolen credentials are fuelling fraud as attackers bypass ATO controls, exposing taxpayers and forcing tax agents to harden logins.
Australian firms risk losing AI advantage if core models and pricing stay offshore, as sovereign control becomes a resilience and trust issue.
Supplier breaches are amplifying disruption, with ransomware incidents in Europe rising 55.1% year on year in the first four months of 2026.
Earlier testing and user feedback have cut accessibility defects in ShareFile by more than 60%, easing procurement for enterprise customers.
The tie-up aims to cut Europe's reliance on overseas chip ecosystems by certifying SUSE software for Openchip's RISC-V hardware.
A new study says cross-border intelligence sharing is vital as fraud losses climb to USD $579.4 billion, yet most tools stay domestic.
Banks could cut compliance review workloads by 77% as Smarsh rolls out AWS-backed AI tools that regulators can still audit.
Its founders say the consultancy has avoided redundancies and kept growth lean, even as demand for AI transformation rises across the region.
Regulated sectors could gain tighter control of credentials as the pair combines software and hardware to cut vendor dependence.
The tie-up aims to bring quantum processors into supercomputing workflows, with France, the UK and Germany as the first target markets.
The funding will help the London-based consultancy expand through acquisitions and into new markets as demand for digital change and security grows.
Human judgment is already being squeezed out of public-sector AI use, raising the risk of bland decisions that miss crises and erode trust.
The four UK regulators are moving generative AI into routine oversight, despite concerns over errors, bias and consumer harm.
Enterprises across Asia may move faster from AI pilots to production, as the deal targets scalable deployment in ASEAN, Japan and South Korea.
The certifications may help reassure UK customers and public-sector buyers as cyber breaches remain widespread and scrutiny of suppliers intensifies.
Partners gain sales support and tools as businesses seek cheaper, more secure ways to modernise ageing endpoint fleets.
The overhaul should cut manual work and improve reporting for 342,000 residents as the council replaces legacy finance systems with cloud software.
The rollout should save staff hours on internal updates as XMA uses screens to target messages across three offices and dozens of divisions.
The 98% coverage could let Essex councils add sensor-based services to one network, avoiding separate infrastructure and saving money.
Security teams and IT departments are being pulled closer together as access control becomes part of wider digital infrastructure.