IT Governance stories
Governance gaps are slowing enterprise adoption as most technology leaders say AI deployment is outpacing controls, according to a cited IBM study.
Workplace systems often falter after go-live, leaving staff with unreliable meeting rooms and higher support costs, the book says.
Hackers are exploiting vulnerabilities in hours or minutes, leaving many organisations compromised before defenders spot the breach.
Defenders face shorter patching windows as Check Point says AI can now turn new flaws into working exploits within hours.
Security teams face faster, harder-to-trace intrusions as AI is now being used to write attack code and run deception during breaches.
Firms say the bigger payoff now lies in embedding AI into logistics, security and data systems, while poor governance leaves firms exposed.
Poor governance is leaving many AI agents stuck out of production, while those that run can expose firms to legal and security risks.
European customers will be able to keep primary email data in the EU from August, easing compliance and improving response times.
Wider use of AI is raising fresh concerns over security, skills and ROI as businesses race ahead of governance and controls.
Business and public sector organisations faced 2,270 attacks a week in June, as ransomware rose 33% and GenAI use exposed sensitive data.
Tighter regulation and rising cyber threats are pushing insurers to bolster defences for customer data and operational systems.
Only one in three UK cyber managers think their compliance model can scale as new rules pile pressure on governance teams.
A gap between perceived readiness and formal scrutiny forced the defence contractor to rebuild its compliance programme before passing.
As AI spreads through core business functions, executives warn weak oversight could expose firms to deepfakes, fraud and costly incidents.
Many workers are being left to learn AI on their own, with junior staff far less confident than senior leaders, a survey shows.
Regulated industries may get a safer route to production AI as the tie-up offers tighter control over data, governance and deployment.
Irish firms face tighter cyber oversight as HCS expands advisory services for regulated sectors and mid-sized businesses lacking in-house compliance teams.
Boards face mounting pressure to set AI rules now, as faster adoption is exposing Australian firms to data, workforce and security risks.
The top ranking signals growing demand for university AI that can manage sensitive data, automate admin work and scale across campus systems.
A lack of clear IT planning is leaving Irish large firms with a €667,000 annual drag from projects that should have been stopped.