Data governance stories
Researchers and institutions could soon gain domestic access to large-scale AI computing as Ottawa backs a new supercomputer with CAD $890 million.
Trust concerns are pausing nearly half of planned AI spending at medium and large firms, with explainability now outweighing regulatory uncertainty.
The award underscores rising demand for managed cyber recovery as firms seek faster restoration and less strain on stretched IT teams.
Businesses handling sensitive data may gain tighter controls as NTT Research turns two-decade-old cryptography into a commercial security suite.
Joint customers can now see which cloud alerts threaten regulated or business-critical data, helping them prioritise remediation and cut alert fatigue.
Companies face tougher, more fragmented compliance as governments tie cyber rules to national security, AI use and digital sovereignty.
Businesses under pressure to prove AI returns may use Qlik's new advisory service to sift viable agentic projects from broad ambitions.
Law firms could cut client disputes as Elite’s new tool spots subjective billing risks before invoices are submitted.
Poor data could now trigger bad AI actions, as Qlik adds trust scores, alerts and stewardship tools to its analytics platform.
The new release could help data teams cut manual pipeline work and deliver fresher data for AI and analytics without extra complexity.
It is aimed at cutting manual reformatting and reconciliation of inconsistent custodian records for wealth managers handling multi-source portfolio data.
The new fund is intended to boost growth while giving the UK more control over data, chips and AI systems used by public services.
Indian organisations get a local administrative data option as the Mumbai deployment keeps policies, logs and metadata inside the country.
Australian retailers risk being overlooked as shoppers increasingly use AI tools to research and buy products without visiting brand websites.
New governance rules could shape procurement and digital projects, as organisations are urged to protect Māori data as taonga.
The new section will put cyber risk and data security alongside connected-vehicle tech as transport operators face rising safety concerns.
Public bodies risk unfair or unlawful AI decisions unless they can trace datasets back to source, a Butterfly Data scientist said.
Most Irish data and AI professionals are staying put as employers prepare to expand teams and compete for scarce talent.
Stricter data and AI rules are pushing enterprises to demand more control over where workloads run and how they are governed.
Businesses in finance and healthcare could gain clearer rules for using datasets as collateral, licensing revenue and investment under the new law.