IT Governance stories
AWS customers will gain limited-preview access to OpenAI models and Codex inside Bedrock, easing enterprise AI deployment and governance.
It could ease compliance and data residency worries for firms that want to run OpenClaw agents without managing infrastructure themselves.
Governance concerns are pushing regulated firms to demand audit trails and human oversight as AI agents move into live operations.
Only about 10% of APAC organisations say their identity systems can fully secure AI agents, bots and service accounts.
Attackers are exploiting help functions to reset credentials and bypass defences, putting entire networks at risk through a single call.
Businesses are racing to upgrade defences as Yubico says quantum computers could expose banking, health data and other records within years.
Technology leaders are being urged to tighten access controls as a Claude AI incident puts database safety and operational resilience under scrutiny.
Regulated firms can now run AI inside existing workflow systems as Nintex’s latest K2 update keeps sensitive data off external services.
Many firms cannot see where their AI agents are, leaving identity, policy and supply-chain risks to grow as deployments scale.
Compliance checks can now draw on existing workforce data, cutting months of manual SOC 2 prep for IT teams already using Rippling.
Modernisation is becoming faster and less risky, helping organisations cut maintenance costs, improve security and sustain service delivery.
It aims to cut manual copying and pasting by letting AI assistants query live GRC records under existing user permissions.
Large firms face mounting pressure to unify cryptography oversight as quantum risk and regulatory scrutiny make legacy encryption harder to defend.
The update gives managed service providers more control over Microsoft 365 and AI risks as demand rises for standardised governance services.
Hospitals risk exposing patient care as AI tools outpace security controls and sit alongside ageing, unpatchable medical systems.
Local firms in regulated sectors can now keep identity security data onshore as scrutiny over machine and AI access intensifies.
Most firms are deploying AI agents without proper oversight, leaving non-human identities exposed as security teams race to catch up.
Australia’s tech sector is seeing routine tasks automated, with demand and pay still strong for scarce software, data and cloud specialists.
Most Australian security teams lack confidence their controls can spot a compromised AI system, even as firms push assistants beyond pilots.
Repeated phishing training helped cut Singapore staff click rates to 7.4% from 17%, despite more than 8,500 fake emails sent.