IT Governance stories
Security teams face a new governance gap as AI agents spread across Microsoft systems, with many lacking inventories, controls or monitoring.
Boards are being urged to overhaul defences as AI speeds attacks and exposes firms to foreign vendors' access risks.
The rollout gives Insight a test case for selling Microsoft's newest AI tools after a survey found most Australian firms are still only experimenting.
The platform aims to help large firms monitor and control autonomous AI as regulation tightens and deployments move into production.
It gives IT teams a way to track agent activity, enforce access rules and watch AI spending as deployments move beyond pilots.
Large enterprises can now buy Aily's AI decision agents via AWS Marketplace, cutting procurement friction and deployment time to as little as one day.
Gaps in oversight leave most firms unable to see what AI is doing inside mobile apps, despite broad adoption and formal governance policies.
Security risks are rising as AI coding tools become routine, leaving many firms unable to track how machine-generated code reaches production.
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.
Rising use of desktop AI tools on managed Macs is forcing IT teams to tighten controls, reporting and compliance oversight across devices.
More firms are using AI daily, but AvePoint found unauthorised access incidents remain widespread as governance trails behind adoption.
Legacy desktop software can now be automated without new APIs, as Amazon Web Services opens WorkSpaces applications to AI agents under existing controls.
Enterprise AI deployments may be exposing sensitive data through overlooked connector permissions, according to a new governance framework from Vivek Kumar.
Recovery plans are lagging as Asian companies rush into agentic AI, with average incident downtime stretching to 28 days, a survey found.
External coding tools can now reach Google Cloud models and notebooks via an open protocol, while IAM Deny policies keep access tightly governed.
Visa is pouring billions into AI defences as regulators demand safer, auditable systems to counter faster cyber threats and fraud.
The Melbourne-based provider's top-70 finish signals Australian MSPs can compete on recurring revenue, growth and business health globally.
Poor oversight is leaving large UK firms to write off GBP £67 billion a year from failed AI and transformation projects.
Australian firms are using AI at scale, but many lack the visibility to stop shadow tools, agentic access and rising incidents.
Australian firms using AI for core operations risk disruption unless they secure contracts, governance and backup plans, LegalVision says.