IT Governance stories
It aims to cut the need for multiple IT tools by combining patching, security alerts and remote support in one dashboard for distributed fleets.
IT teams could cut routine handling time as N-able connects live endpoint data to external AI models and embeds guidance in its consoles.
Fewer than half of firms have the safeguards to track staff AI use, even as 77% reported a cyber incident in the past year.
Faster AI-led flaw discovery could overwhelm patching and disclosure processes, leaving companies with bigger backlogs and less time to respond.
Organisations face a growing gap in controls as AI agents and machine identities outpace perimeter defences and widen credential-based attack risk.
AI agents and service accounts are exposing Australian and New Zealand firms to regulatory, financial and reputational risk as controls lag.
Governance gaps are slowing customer AI rollouts, as 51% of MSPs cite compliance as the main barrier and demand for integrated tools rises.
Operational complexity is slowing AI rollouts for managed service providers, even as most invest in automation to meet compliance demands.
The new software promises to cut the time and cost of building governed enterprise AI systems from weeks to hours for corporate teams.
Customers will no longer need separate AI purchases as every ServiceNow product now bundles automation, governance and data tools by default.
Most Global 2000 companies are using AI without clear ownership, raising risks as systems increasingly shape hiring, spending and compliance decisions.
Most technology leaders are still finding their feet as companies race to deploy AI despite skills gaps, data problems and compliance pressure.
Race analysis that once took hours can now be done in minutes, giving NASCAR quicker insight into fan views and on-track competition.
Rising cloud and AI sovereignty risks are forcing firms to map data exposure and contingency plans as Kyndryl adds a readiness assessment.
Centralised technology buying could save NZD $3.9 billion over five years as Wellington consolidates digital systems and leadership.
Weak mobile systems are slowing frontline AI rollouts, with downtime, manual workarounds and connectivity gaps hitting Australian healthcare and logistics teams.
Enterprises facing rising AI costs may see greater demand for partners that can prove delivery experience on AWS as projects move into production.
Singapore’s digital economy faces rising pressure as attacks climbed 22% in March, far outpacing a 5% global decline.
Governance gaps and rising security worries are slowing Australian firms as they shift from AI pilots to production use, the report says.
Poor governance could expose Australian firms to legal, reputational and operational risks as they deploy autonomous AI agents at scale.