Risk Management stories
Many organisations in Australia and New Zealand are still waiting for AI to pay off, as 77% of CFOs report no meaningful return yet.
Nutanix Kubernetes Platform users can now add CloudCasa tools for backup, recovery and migration across on-premises, edge and cloud sites.
Treasury teams can now manage fiat and digital holdings in one platform, as Ripple targets the growing demand for corporate crypto visibility.
Security teams risk hidden breaches if they trust AI too much, Secure.com warns, urging human oversight, auditability and clear governance.
Despite recession fears, most global leaders plan to keep AI spending high, with average budgets set at USD $186 million over the next year.
The consortium aims to help firms find quantum-vulnerable systems and plan replacements before current public-key cryptography becomes unsafe.
The recognition highlights growing demand for auditable AI, as regulated industries seek tools they can trust in live operations.
Despite recession fears, 74 per cent of senior executives still plan to keep AI near the top of budgets, KPMG found.
NinjaTrader’s marketing teams in the US and Europe will use AI tools to speed checks on ads and social posts amid tighter scrutiny.
Hidden software and poorly protected backups are leaving businesses more exposed to automated ransomware attacks, security experts warned.
The new tool aims to cut false declines as payment firms face faster-moving fraud patterns and rising losses from card abuse.
Real estate agencies and conveyancers face new AML checks from 1 July 2026, with PEXA Clear sold per transaction to cut compliance costs.
AI disruptions and cyberattacks are forcing organisations to back up models, prompts and knowledge bases, not just files.
Demand from larger businesses has lifted Ramp’s enterprise customer base 133% in 2025, as Visa adopts its software too.
The bank's private wealth arm will shift to a single system to cut complexity and improve service for advisers and clients.
Poorly governed outbound email is leaving UK firms exposed, after 83% of IT leaders reported an email-related security incident.
Greater efficiency and profit gains are pushing smaller firms to invest in data and AI, while compliance digitisation lags behind.
Most incidents led to shutdowns, supply chain disruption or lost sales, with many firms still leaving cyber risk outside the boardroom.
Businesses and victims face longer waits as fraud and computer misuse offences have outpaced specialist police staffing by 57 percentage points since 2020.
The deal will help the bank integration software provider expand enterprise services, develop new products and pursue acquisitions.