Insider threats stories
Enterprises running SAP may gain around-the-clock protection as the partners target ransomware, fraud and staffing gaps in ERP security.
Most enterprise AI use is slipping beyond oversight, with 86% of organisations lacking visibility into data moving to and from tools.
The tie-up aims to help Australian organisations spot suspicious activity sooner as AI-driven systems and human users blur traditional security boundaries.
Regulatory deadlines and access risks are pushing companies to treat AI agents like privileged users, lifting demand for identity security tools.
Access to AI research and software is drawing state-backed and criminal attacks, with technology firms now the world's most targeted sector.
Behavioural analytics is becoming essential as AI agents can pursue tasks so efficiently that they may cause damage without any malicious intent.
Security teams can now restore Microsoft 365 data from ransomware or deletion within Sophos Central, reducing reliance on separate backup tools.
The new feature targets shadow AI on laptops and desktops, helping security teams block data leaks before models can access sensitive files.
Enterprise security teams face a new visibility gap as approved AI agents can copy and transfer sensitive data in under 30 minutes.
Sophos customers can now restore Microsoft 365 data after ransomware or account compromise without leaving the Sophos Central console.
Organisations using Microsoft Teams will gain new defences against phishing and impersonation as attackers shift beyond email to trusted chat tools.
It lets customers apply existing data loss and governance policies to AI-assisted work in Claude, after suspicious AI incidents hit 42% of firms.
Most workers are blurring the line between corporate and personal AI use, leaving employers blind to sensitive data shared outside approved accounts.
Unapproved collaboration apps are widening security loopholes for APAC businesses as AI tools spread faster than governance can keep up.
Approval-based access controls now give security teams tighter oversight of privileged accounts as AI agents expand the attack surface.
Australian businesses risk data leaks and governance gaps as staff adopt AI tools faster than employers can set rules and training.
More than half of Irish office staff say speed is taking precedence over rules, raising the risk of unchecked breaches and data lapses.
Security teams can spot risky data movement before alerts fire, helping stop sensitive information from leaving approved channels.
Small firms facing rising data-loss risks now get stronger checks on outbound email, with AI warnings for misdirected messages and sensitive content.
Businesses facing rising cyber threats in Australia will gain broader access to Exabeam's security operations tools through a new Chillisoft partnership.