IT Governance stories
Australian businesses risk data leaks and governance gaps as staff adopt AI tools faster than employers can set rules and training.
The biggest gains from autonomous IT come from cleaner CMDBs and faster incident resolution, not new software, as firms join up existing tools.
Governance and cost controls are moving into the platform layer as new tools aim to cut manual requests and speed up deployments.
The semiconductor maker will shift internal IT operations to a managed services model designed to cut incidents and improve employee support.
The update gives MSPs EU data residency and tighter credential controls as clients and insurers demand clearer audit trails and access visibility.
Enterprise users can now see credit spend by person, product and model, helping finance teams spot adoption trends and control costs more tightly.
Independent validation of its Azure migration work gives A1 Technologies added credibility with clients moving critical systems to the cloud.
Most executives lack visibility over AI suppliers and infrastructure, leaving core operations exposed to outages, compliance risks and vendor lock-in.
IT teams can now plan Microsoft 365 tenant moves around identity first, reducing clashes before mailboxes and workloads are migrated.
The phased rollout will give regulated enterprises dedicated AI compute capacity from late 2026, with healthcare among the target sectors.
Most enterprise AI use is slipping beyond oversight, with 86% of organisations lacking visibility into data moving to and from tools.
Secure GIS access across four countries will help Perigus Energy manage wind, solar and battery assets during its post-acquisition transition.
Mac users at many firms can now be covered by the same AI data-loss rules as Windows, closing a governance gap for sensitive work.
Most large US enterprises say AI agents are creating unmanaged financial and compliance risks, with many forced to reverse their actions.
UK businesses face fresh pressure to tighten AI governance as Microsoft's pricing changes make bundled licences more compelling.
Organisations adopting AI on AWS will get more support running Claude securely, as Lyra Cloud Services adds Anthropic access through Bedrock.
The hire supports Constl's fibre expansion in India, where better internal systems are becoming crucial for serving telecom and cloud customers.
Korean banks and agencies can now keep security logs in-country as Google Cloud tries to ease compliance worries over cloud-based threat monitoring.
Clients are increasingly demanding proof that cloud and AI spending is lifting productivity, revenue or cost control, not just adding systems.
The update should ease compliance concerns for regulated firms by keeping incident data inside customer environments, including air-gapped sites.