Business Continuity stories
A smaller band of operators is driving most incidents, leaving companies facing fewer but more organised ransomware gangs.
IT teams could cut repair times as Phoenix47's new agent mines past incidents and internal documents to guide engineers live.
Experts say AI is accelerating ransomware attacks, shrinking the patching window and forcing organisations to overhaul defences and recovery plans.
HPE Networking says AI, zero trust and SASE are reshaping network security as remote work and connected devices make threats harder to control.
Outages at major cloud providers have sharpened demand for database resilience as firms seek failover across on-premise and cloud systems.
Synology unveils FS6420 and FS3420 all-flash storage systems to boost on-premises enterprise workloads with faster IOPS and resilient connectivity.
Enterprises using Kyndryl Bridge have seen fewer outages and lower maintenance costs as AI flags IT risks before systems fail.
Customers can block attacks without rerouting traffic, as Megaport adds in-network DDoS filtering to its internet connectivity service.
The move is meant to replace fragmented regional planning with a single global system, giving tesa faster decisions as supply chains shift.
The free cloud service gives Veeam users and service providers a single view of scattered backup clusters as ransomware risk grows.
Stronger demand for cloud data tools lifted AvePoint’s first-quarter revenue 26% and prompted the company to raise its full-year ARR outlook.
Ransomware is hitting Australian large businesses harder than global peers, with most victims still paying attackers despite backup defences.
Ransomware pressure on Canadian firms is intensifying as AI speeds attacks, with 374 organisations extorted and losses mounting.
The partnership gives evacuees and responders faster access to rides and supplies when floods, fires and storms disrupt transport across Ontario.
Argyll Data Development launches UK sovereign AI inference cloud with SambaNova, targeting regulated firms seeking local control over data and systems.
New Zealand firms face mounting identity fraud losses of NZD $2.2 million a year, as 90% fear AI-linked weaknesses in document checks.
Deloitte says NZ firms must redesign jobs and systems for the AI era as robotics, cyber risk and labour shortages reshape work.
Sleep loss and costly cover gaps are leaving most UK small firms exposed, as 77% say they do not understand cyber insurance.
Survey data showing 35% of small firms hit by cyberattacks has prompted a free Optus scheme to help businesses prepare and respond.
Yet only 15 per cent have deployed OT-specific visibility tools, even as cyber incidents have already disrupted critical systems for most respondents.