Financial Services stories
Regulators may soon demand proof of who did what as AI agents start opening merge requests in heavily audited development pipelines.
About 7% of monitored interactions raised security, compliance or operational concerns as enterprises deploy more autonomous AI into daily workflows.
The listing should speed procurement for cloud customers as employers face rising risks from impersonation, fraud and stolen credentials.
Regulated firms can now scan code for flaws without sending sensitive data to external AI services, as AISLE targets private deployments.
The funding underscores investor demand for AI-focused cybersecurity tools as enterprises face new endpoint risks from human users and agents.
Rising fares and disruption are pushing more travellers to dispute payments through banks, putting travel merchants under heavier refund pressure.
The combined group would process more than USD $500 billion a year, giving merchants broader cross-border payment tools across 190 markets.
Law enforcement teams may cut review time as the platform tackles noisy, multilingual recordings and flags relevant evidence from $50.
Enterprise buyers are demanding proof of what AI agents do, as scrutiny rises over permissions, ownership and audit trails across organisations.
The tie-up gives UK public sector and finance customers a route to use AI on governed legacy records without losing auditability or control.
Financial services and other regulated firms gain local support to deploy Aryza software faster as Nucleo becomes its UK and Ireland partner.
Confidence in recovery plans is collapsing as most firms fail to meet targets during major outages, exposing vendor and AI governance gaps.
Weeks before a planned August debut, the app aims to entice more than 2 billion Muslims with chat, video and faith-based AI tools.
The 600-petabyte deployment is set to underpin regulated AI workloads in Australia as demand for onshore data control intensifies.
Growing fears over deepfakes have pushed Ion to seek Australian patent protection for a method that verifies video at the byte level.
Governance failures have forced most Australian enterprises to pull back customer-facing AI agents, even as spending plans and deployments keep rising.
Consumer patience is thinning, with Australian customers most likely to walk away when poor communications or clumsy data capture erode trust.
Sydney will coordinate wider APJ growth as demand rises for earlier warning on cyber threats hitting critical infrastructure and finance.
Public backing is strongest where facial recognition is tied to security, with 81% supporting border checks and 53% favouring tighter limits.
The Sheffield cybersecurity firm gains global visibility and policy access as concerns rise over quantum-era attacks on critical networks.