Risk Management stories
Production data from hundreds of enterprise customers shows AI agents are handling only a few high-volume workflows, reshaping deployment priorities.
The Gurugram trial is an early test of whether AI screening can ease access to routine checks in underserved communities.
Despite high strategic priority, most firms still share little data with partners, exposing integration and governance as the main blockers.
It gives software teams a way to change AI agent behaviour in production in under 200 milliseconds, reducing the risk of bad outputs reaching users.
The addition could help organisations prioritise critical systems after an attack, cutting recovery from days to minutes and limiting breach damage.
Independent testing suggests enterprise AI can be deployed without exposed inbound ports, easing security concerns for firms handling sensitive data.
SAP users could cut manual testing as Tricentis adds AI-generated test cases and self-healing tools to Enterprise Continuous Testing.
Identity and data protection tools are taking a larger share of European security budgets as older perimeter products lose ground.
Many firms lack visibility over AI-written software, raising maintainability and security risks as adoption of coding assistants accelerates.
Security teams can now automate exposure fixes and reporting as Tenable makes Hexa AI generally available to Tenable One customers.
Users will soon be able to check whether images and video were AI-made or edited as Google widens provenance tools in Search, Chrome and Pixel.
The tie-up aims to let law firms and in-house teams ground AI-assisted drafting and research in their own precedents and knowhow.
Legal teams will be able to benchmark AI uptake and governance as Harvey opens early access to a tool built to replace spreadsheets and manual reporting.
Growing use of AI fakery is forcing companies to verify who is really on screen before hiring, approving payments or granting access.
Businesses now need AI that fits into managed processes, as speed alone can create fragmentation and weaken oversight across customer-facing work.
The UK fintech aims to speed customer checks in new markets while tightening controls on financial crime and fraud.
Most UK businesses using AI are not checking suppliers' systems, even as cyber incidents and revenue losses linked to third parties rise.
Smaller firms risk being left behind unless ministers back AI infrastructure, training and accessible support, the body said.
Ageing systems are leaving public services exposed to outages and cyber-attacks, with 28 per cent of high-risk government IT unfunded for fixes.
Large firms face mounting execution risk as weak governance, legacy systems and poor change management threaten to derail AI spending.