IT Governance stories
Enterprises deploying agentic AI are getting a new tool to spot data leaks, policy breaches and runaway costs before they spread.
Many UK organisations still cannot prove they can restore vital systems quickly if ransomware, cloud outages or device failures strike.
Many firms still lack recoverable copies of critical data as ransomware increasingly targets cloud and SaaS systems, experts warn.
Only 14% of organisations have reached top cloud maturity, leaving many AI projects at risk as spending lags behind demand.
With IT teams stretched thin, the platform automates Linux security and maintenance across cloud and on-premises systems while preserving oversight.
AI growth is straining enterprise cloud budgets, with 88% of firms saying underinvestment now puts modernisation and migration plans at risk.
Many firms still fail to test SaaS recovery properly, leaving identity outages able to cut off access to other core applications.
Managed service providers risk missing client needs if they chase AI hype first, Ian Groves told an industry event in London.
Enterprise finance teams will be able to connect oversight tools faster, as MindBridge opens access to more than 130 API endpoints and integration guides.
Most boards are using AI for routine tasks, but only 3% have woven it into risk oversight, leaving organisations exposed to fresh hazards.
Outages and opaque AI decisions are pushing APAC firms to use observability to keep automated systems reliable, accountable and compliant.
Without proper oversight, rapidly growing AI agent workforces could leave firms blind to who can access systems, data and privileges.
Many enterprises still cannot prove they can restore data quickly enough as cloud, container and AI systems outpace traditional backup plans.
Rising fake-invoice and identity risks are pushing firms to centralise signing controls as AI makes forged documents harder to spot.
Pressure to adopt AI is outpacing safeguards, with most firms saying governance and legal controls have lagged behind deployment.
The funding will help Qodo expand globally as enterprises look for ways to verify AI-written code before it reaches production systems.
Most UK organisations lack full visibility of AI tools in use, leaving security teams slower to spot breaches and respond to incidents.
Hospital patients still rely on phone lines for urgent care updates, leaving trusts wary of telephony changes as the PSTN switch-off looms.
Only 42% of Australian organisations back up all workloads, leaving many exposed when ransomware or hardware failures hit.
Customers in Ottawa and Eastern Ontario will gain broader cybersecurity and AI advice as the merged firm keeps local ownership and uninterrupted service.