AI Adoption stories
As AI spreads through core business functions, executives warn weak oversight could expose firms to deepfakes, fraud and costly incidents.
Many workers are being left to learn AI on their own, with junior staff far less confident than senior leaders, a survey shows.
Only 12% of UK companies qualify as AI leaders, with most still struggling to turn pilot projects into measurable returns.
Defenders face shorter patching windows as Check Point says AI can now turn new flaws into working exploits within hours.
Rising pressure on learning leaders to prove AI returns has kept NIIT Learning at the top of Fosway's digital learning assessment for a second year.
Firms say the bigger payoff now lies in embedding AI into logistics, security and data systems, while poor governance leaves firms exposed.
As AI adoption lifts demand for observability tools, New Relic is betting on a veteran sales leader to expand its reach with large customers.
Businesses using autonomous AI on endpoints face new oversight gaps, as Keeper extends its privilege controls to agent actions and approvals.
Users can now pull Dropbox files into ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini Spark, keeping AI output tied to existing permissions and team workflows.
Wider use of AI is raising fresh concerns over security, skills and ROI as businesses race ahead of governance and controls.
Microsoft 365 users may see stronger first drafts and faster analysis as OpenAI's latest model becomes the default Copilot engine.
Many AI roll-outs miss returns for years because businesses fail to spot customer pain points before automating broken processes.
Australian firms are increasingly using AI in day-to-day operations, with leaders saying data quality and human oversight now matter more than pilot projects.
Public confidence may decide whether generative AI delivers up to USD $76 billion for New Zealand by 2038, TUANZ said.
Local language support and mobile-first use have helped drive Gemini adoption across a region where younger users are setting the pace.
As firms roll out AI and new systems, the real test is whether staff keep using them after launch enthusiasm fades.
Nearly half of Zip's Australian customers now use AI to compare and research purchases, but most still want to make the final call themselves.
The five-year funding is aimed at turning Alberta's AI research into faster public services, stronger health care and local commercial gains.
A survey of 385 workers suggests poor handovers, rework and meeting overload are draining productivity across Australian and New Zealand firms.
Public servants tested ChatGPT and Codex on drafting and research, as agencies weigh whether AI can speed up routine work without losing human oversight.