IT Governance stories
Enterprises using Kyndryl Bridge have seen fewer outages and lower maintenance costs as AI flags IT risks before systems fail.
Fragmented knowledge and search systems are leaving many firms with AI tools they distrust, despite rising budgets and heavy spending.
Organisations using AI in software development will get training on secure coding and governance as vulnerabilities and data risks mount.
The free cloud service gives Veeam users and service providers a single view of scattered backup clusters as ransomware risk grows.
A widening visibility gap is leaving organisations exposed, with AI now involved in 83 per cent of reported breaches, Gigamon found.
Customers will see a stronger push toward SaaS-delivered identity security as the company reshapes its product portfolio around non-human identities.
SAP customers facing a 2027 maintenance deadline can now get a 45-minute assessment of migration, cost and support risks.
Most firms are now running AI in production, with hybrid clouds and security controls becoming crucial as inference overtakes training.
More than half of small and medium-sized firms in Australia and New Zealand have no dedicated security team, leaving them exposed to cyberattacks.
Live endpoint data will now feed ServiceNow workflows, aiming to cut incident response times and automate patching across large fleets.
The tie-up aims to help firms scale AI agents with better governance, tracing decisions and proving business impact beyond pilot projects.
The tie-up aims to cut investigation times and patching errors by feeding live endpoint data into ServiceNow workflows and AI agents.
Vendor assessments could be completed faster and with less manual chasing as the new tool verifies evidence rather than self-reported answers.
The deal gives employers a single place to curb waste from software renewals and shelfware as AI subscriptions add to IT spending.
Rising attack speeds are forcing stretched IT teams to act faster, as Tanium says its new system can turn one operator into many.
AI-driven attacks are exposing weak passwords on cameras and access controls, prompting calls for stricter governance across physical security systems.
Indian firms are moving to tighten software controls as AI agents and code generation raise new security and auditability risks.
Security teams are being forced into faster triage as AI shortens the gap between flaw disclosure and attack to hours.
More than half of public sector IT staff say artificial intelligence has added work, as fragmented systems and policy gaps complicate adoption.
A lack of visibility is leaving many European organisations unable to tell whether AI-powered attacks have already breached their systems.