GRC stories
The hire comes as the cyber risk company expands into third-party and supply chain defence, with attacks on connected networks growing more persistent.
Rising AI failures are forcing firms to isolate response teams from the corporate network as incidents multiply across models and agents.
Customers may see clearer safeguards as cyber security firms adopt AI, with NCC Group joining a charter setting standards for oversight and transparency.
Security teams are being offered new tools to track shadow AI and block prompt injection as enterprises rush to deploy agents and models.
Growing AI use in coding is widening software risk, forcing security leaders to match training and controls to each adoption stage.
The tie-up gives enterprises a single policy layer to curb data leaks and compliance risks as AI workloads spread across clouds and models.
More than 1,300 organisations have adopted the platform in six weeks, as Tanium bets AI can cut endpoint security and IT workflows.
Enterprise security teams gain a new AI-assisted way to spot exploitable code flaws, as IBM widens its cyber work with OpenAI.
Carmakers face tougher proof requirements as software-heavy vehicles multiply vulnerabilities across suppliers, apps and cloud systems.
The recognition comes as firms scramble to secure software pipelines, open-source code and AI assets against rising supply chain attacks.
Security teams want daily scanning and clearer risk rankings as cloud sprawl and third-party reliance widen attack surfaces, a survey found.
Enterprises running SAP may gain around-the-clock protection as the partners target ransomware, fraud and staffing gaps in ERP security.
IT teams on Apple fleets can now set rules, spot unsanctioned tools and generate compliance reports as AI use spreads across Macs.
It aims to help large organisations spot hidden control risks as roles, credentials and delegated access combine across fragmented systems.
Private preview access is now available as security teams race to govern AI agents and harden identity controls for a post-quantum era.
Most UK cybersecurity managers say rushed certification can undermine trust and leave controls weaker than ongoing monitoring would reveal.
The extension gives Rugby Australia two more years of protection against cyber threats as sporting bodies face rising risks to data and match-day systems.
Skills shortages are leaving New Zealand firms exposed as AI adoption outpaces cyber and governance expertise across key sectors.
Compliance teams can now track behaviour, manage assignments and edit course content in one portal, reducing manual data work and extra systems.
Only about one in 10 senior finance candidates can prove practical AI use, leaving UK employers short of leaders able to meet new hiring demands.