Cyber Risk stories
Boards are being urged to overhaul defences as AI speeds attacks and exposes firms to foreign vendors' access risks.
Enterprises and public bodies face rising pressure to replace vulnerable encryption as QNu Labs and SAGA Consultants target global quantum-safe security demand.
Only a small share of alerts proved urgent, but critical vulnerability exposures more than doubled as phishing also surged in the report.
The designation underlines rising demand for cyber recovery and AI-era data protection as enterprises shift from backup alone to broader resilience.
Large firms are using security consulting to cut risk and costs, with IDC saying Mandiant customers gained USD $4.3 million a year on average.
The monthly offer bundles training, controls and remediation for Australian mid-market firms facing staff-driven cyber risk and AI-related exposure.
Missed intrusions could cost more than false alarms, as Secure.com says AI tools in security operations can miss real attacks in live use.
Organisations have only days to patch gaps as AI-driven attackers automate the same old weaknesses, Five Eyes warned.
The deal aims to help boards turn cyber data into clearer risk reporting as firms face pressure to prove controls reduce exposure.
The agreement gives Italian resellers another backup and disaster recovery option as NAKIVO expands through ICOS's local channel network.
The move boosts Mphasis' cybersecurity profile as enterprises seek tighter protection around AI rollouts and Microsoft-based systems.
Layered controls and supply-chain oversight were linked to far fewer serious workplace incidents across APAC, the report found.
Security teams are still struggling to turn vulnerability alerts into fixes, leaving companies exposed for months when IT and operations must act separately.
Australian businesses face a new cyber baseline as regulators move to align guidance with cloud, SaaS and AI-driven threats.
Reliable Wi-Fi and cyber security helped organisers keep broadcasts, ticketing and fan services running at the U.S. Open.
Operators of essential services will need to manage AI, legacy systems and supplier risks under staged obligations due in 2027 and 2028.
More than half of Singapore respondents lacked full visibility of employee AI use, heightening fears over shadow tools, data leaks and breaches.
The pact aims to help enterprises patch vulnerable open source code faster without forcing disruptive upgrades to production systems.
False negatives from automated scanning tools are fuelling a shift towards human-led AI security testing across large organisations.
The certifications may help reassure UK customers and public-sector buyers as cyber breaches remain widespread and scrutiny of suppliers intensifies.