Risk Management stories
With AI speeding up attacks, 53% of security leaders say point-in-time tests are already outdated by the time reports land.
Districts under pressure to release incident footage could cut manual review time as Pimloc's software blurs student faces and documents.
The funding underscores investor demand for AI-focused cybersecurity tools as enterprises face new endpoint risks from human users and agents.
Most security teams still miss the value in their footage, as only incident-led reviews turn vast video archives into useful evidence.
Ransomware and compliance risks are rising as AI concentrates more business data in storage systems that must now prove they can recover fast.
Rising fares and disruption are pushing more travellers to dispute payments through banks, putting travel merchants under heavier refund pressure.
The combined group would process more than USD $500 billion a year, giving merchants broader cross-border payment tools across 190 markets.
Pressure is mounting on security teams as AI spending rises, with 68% saying the job has become harder over two years.
Businesses deploying autonomous AI agents face tighter oversight as Zscaler adds controls for agent access, data flows and endpoint threats.
Most firms still leave broad internal paths open, letting a single breach spread across servers and disrupt operations, a report says.
Enterprise buyers are demanding proof of what AI agents do, as scrutiny rises over permissions, ownership and audit trails across organisations.
Only 24% of workers feel ready to use AI effectively, as firms roll out tools faster than training and governance can keep pace.
The tie-up gives UK public sector and finance customers a route to use AI on governed legacy records without losing auditability or control.
Financial services and other regulated firms gain local support to deploy Aryza software faster as Nucleo becomes its UK and Ireland partner.
Confidence in recovery plans is collapsing as most firms fail to meet targets during major outages, exposing vendor and AI governance gaps.
Workers are pushing employers to improve safety, as a new survey found most want more digital tools and clearer crisis plans.
Growing concern over AI misuse of sports likenesses is boosting demand for rights-management tools as TrueRights expands into the sector.
Runtime behaviour, not login checks, is now seen as the key control as businesses put AI agents into live systems and data.
Public backing is strongest where facial recognition is tied to security, with 81% supporting border checks and 53% favouring tighter limits.
After a season of racing and retraining, the software's forecasts were shown to be far more reliable, even in severe offshore conditions.