Cyber resilience stories
Ransomware is hitting Australian large businesses harder than global peers, with most victims still paying attackers despite backup defences.
Australian firms face growing cyber gaps as insurers and clients demand evidence of controls beyond the Essential Eight, amid new AI threats.
Survey data showing 35% of small firms hit by cyberattacks has prompted a free Optus scheme to help businesses prepare and respond.
Enterprise buyers may never reach the sales call if a security firm is absent from search results, because digital authority now shapes trust and deal flow.
Daily recovery testing now gives the Queensland council greater confidence its warning and evacuation systems will stay online during severe weather.
Consulting firms urged to slow AI rollouts as Trend-Setters Consulting Chief Executive Officer Sam Shar warns of rising cyber risks and rushed deals.
The tie-up could help security teams cut false alarms and patch faster as automated attacks shrink defenders’ reaction time.
Cybersecurity buyers facing tighter regulation and rising attack risk may see faster go-to-market execution as Bitdefender puts Frank Koelmel in charge of global revenue strategy.
Small defence contractors are left exposed as state-backed hackers spend years mapping supply chains and laying covert access routes before striking.
Security chiefs say AI agents and credential theft are making password-only defences too risky as World Password Day returns.
Strong recurring revenue growth lifted Commvault’s full-year sales to USD $1.184 billion, while SaaS jumped 52% and cash flow hit a record.
Businesses are racing to upgrade defences as Yubico says quantum computers could expose banking, health data and other records within years.
Business leaders say burnout is a hard financial risk, urging employers to build mental health into job design, leadership and daily operations.
The certifications bolster EY's appeal to clients handling sensitive data and regulated work as Singapore tightens digital trust standards.
Deloitte says NZ firms must redesign jobs and systems for the AI era as robotics, cyber risk and labour shortages reshape work.
Yet only 15 per cent have deployed OT-specific visibility tools, even as cyber incidents have already disrupted critical systems for most respondents.
Security teams are being forced into faster triage as AI shortens the gap between flaw disclosure and attack to hours.
A lack of visibility is leaving many European organisations unable to tell whether AI-powered attacks have already breached their systems.
The findings add pressure on ministers to modernise the 1990 Computer Misuse Act as breaches hit 43% of UK businesses and 28% of charities.
The hire underscores how support quality can sway renewals and growth as cyber buyers demand help with deployment and integration.