Identity governance stories
Most firms are deploying AI agents without proper oversight, leaving non-human identities exposed as security teams race to catch up.
Pressure is mounting on security teams as non-human identities and AI tools outpace controls, leaving APAC firms exposed to misuse.
The move aims to help enterprises govern AI tools across clouds and systems as they wrestle with rising risk, complexity and automation.
Attackers are exploiting passkeys, stolen sessions and AI-generated scams, exposing gaps in identity security beyond the login screen.
AI-driven attacks are exposing weak passwords on cameras and access controls, prompting calls for stricter governance across physical security systems.
Canadian firms are still exposed by weak identity controls, despite reporting slightly fewer cyberattacks than the global average.
Security chiefs say AI agents and credential theft are making password-only defences too risky as World Password Day returns.
Poor identity controls and slow remediation are leaving cloud users exposed as attacks now exploit trust relationships rather than one flaw.
The offline card is aimed at keeping staff logged in when identity systems fail, after the Stryker breach exposed how outages can halt operations.
The hire strengthens Saviynt's regional push as APJ enterprises step up identity security spending to manage cloud and hybrid work risks.
Most firms expect autonomous tools to outstrip guardrails within a year, leaving agent actions hard to see, control and roll back.
Businesses face a growing security gap as autonomous AI agents take actions inside corporate systems with far less human oversight.
Large organisations face growing exposure as AI agents are increasingly granted privileged access without the oversight applied to human staff.
Rising phishing, smishing and social engineering attacks are exposing connected cameras and access systems to credential theft, Genetec says.
AI security optimism is running ahead of readiness, as most Canadian organisations still lack zero trust and full access visibility.
Australian firms are being urged to adopt passwordless logins as AI tools and data leakage make stolen credentials easier to exploit.
Most Australian firms expect AI agents to outrun security controls within a year, as only 22 per cent say they can fully see them.
Local firms in regulated sectors can now keep identity security data onshore as scrutiny over machine and AI access intensifies.
More firms are turning identity security budgets to attack path tools as hybrid and AI-heavy environments expose gaps in remediation.
Singapore companies face rising cyber risk as AI agents and machine accounts gain access without proper oversight, Delinea research shows.