Access Control stories
The ranking highlights growing demand for governed AI tools in regulated sectors, where document control and auditability are becoming critical.
Technology leaders are being urged to tighten access controls as a Claude AI incident puts database safety and operational resilience under scrutiny.
It lets developers use AI coding tools without pasting sensitive credentials into prompts, reducing the risk of secrets leaking into logs or source control.
Regulated firms can now run AI inside existing workflow systems as Nintex’s latest K2 update keeps sensitive data off external services.
Rising AI use is widening attack surfaces, while most organisations still need nearly a month to recover from cyber incidents.
Accountants facing staff shortages may gain faster workflows, as Sage Intacct’s new agent exposes its calculations, sources and audit trail.
The new tool gives Copilot access to enterprise file stores without opening up records beyond existing permissions, cutting governance risk for users.
It aims to cut manual copying and pasting by letting AI assistants query live GRC records under existing user permissions.
Businesses face rising exposure as AI is used to sharpen phishing, while insecure in-house tools and weak controls widen attack surfaces.
The update gives managed service providers more control over Microsoft 365 and AI risks as demand rises for standardised governance services.
Flaws in widely used building controls could let remote attackers seize heating, lighting and access systems or expose sensitive data.
Poor identity controls and slow remediation are leaving cloud users exposed as attacks now exploit trust relationships rather than one flaw.
The release aims to curb a growing security risk as enterprises let autonomous agents into internal apps with broad human-style access.
Recent AI-driven leaks are forcing firms to rethink IP protection as sensitive code and creative assets move across cloud tools and public repositories.
Enterprises face growing breach and compliance risks as autonomous software bypasses static access controls and acts across systems without oversight.
Most firms are deploying AI agents without proper oversight, leaving non-human identities exposed as security teams race to catch up.
Most Australian security teams lack confidence their controls can spot a compromised AI system, even as firms push assistants beyond pilots.
Customers will now get independent assurance that Nebula Global Services has tested its defences against common cyber threats across its systems.
Information on about 500,000 volunteers is being offered for sale online, raising fears that stolen health and DNA data could be misused for years.
Companies seeking Cyber Essentials certification must now use multi-factor authentication and managed devices, as remote working rules tighten.