GRC stories
Only 10% of large organisations have defences against AI-specific attacks, even as the UK sees four nationally significant cyber incidents a week.
Most organisations are scaling AI in database management without formal controls, Redgate says, despite adoption rising to 44% last year.
Most UK cybersecurity managers say rushed certification can undermine trust and leave controls weaker than ongoing monitoring would reveal.
Security teams can now query Silent Push data through Claude and ChatGPT after the platform added AI access, bulk enrichment and reorganised modules.
Enterprise security teams are being pushed to track what AI agents can access and do across apps, identities and workflows before data is exposed.
The update gives Microsoft customers faster visibility into AI-driven access risks, after Netwrix linked broader identity footprints to higher breach rates.
IT teams are under pressure to expose hidden SharePoint permissions before AI assistants in Microsoft 365 surface confidential files.
The hire signals Spektrum's push to turn growing demand for cyber resilience tools into repeatable global sales and channel growth.
Manual access reviews and audit gaps are adding hidden costs as firms hit mid-year and rethink identity governance budgets.
Organisations risk missed exposures as cloud, APIs and AI systems change far faster than annual security checks can keep up.
Organisations running sensitive workloads on Google Cloud can now get independent verification that systems and data have not been altered.
The recognition underlines rising demand for tools that secure software builds before attackers can exploit open source dependencies and pipelines.
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.
Managed service providers could cut hours of manual vulnerability work per client as the update links scans, remediation and audit evidence.
The software aims to stop printed and scanned documents slipping outside managed workflows, a growing compliance risk for AI-heavy firms.
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.