Law enforcement stories
Employers could face faster detection of illegal content on staff devices as the new tool flags known abuse material without exposing reviewers to images.
Customers are increasingly being tricked into approving payments, as UK banks reported a 62% rise in attempted social engineering scams in 2025.
Unusual claims are testing insurers as a motorway cow, cannabis farm and disputed robot mower all led to real payouts and refusals.
Customer data and service security may be at risk, as nearly one in five UK telecom web servers leak configuration details, a study finds.
Scam losses may top USD $1 trillion a year, forcing banks to use real-time intelligence and customer data to curb authorised push payments.
Growing demand for sanctions checks, ownership scrutiny and cyber risk is driving Heligan's move into specialist intelligence for deals and disputes.
Stronger demand for drone-defence systems helped lift cash receipts and left DroneShield with AUD $222.8 million in cash and deposits.
Security teams are bracing for harder-to-stop attacks after the model found a Linux kernel flaw that had gone unnoticed for 27 years.
Cross-store intelligence is helping police and retailers identify violent repeat thieves, with US chains driving most of the network's links.
Employers face a rising risk of criminal probes and reputational damage as new scans flag illegal child abuse imagery on work devices.
Users hit by Drift Protocol’s USD $285 million exploit will be repaid as trading restarts under a recovery plan led by Tether.
Boards facing tighter scrutiny may find the book's security-led framework useful as risk, reputation and duty of care collide.
The tie-up gives the online marketplace a more formal role in brand-protection talks as scrutiny over counterfeit listings continues to rise.
The portable system lets military and police teams rehearse drone threats offline in minutes, without fixed sites or extra logistics.
Travel customers could face phishing scams after Booking.com found suspicious activity may have exposed names, contact details and reservation data.
Real-time in-cabin cameras could better spot impaired drivers than roadside chemical tests, the Australian firm says, as fatigue and drugs blur risk.
Privacy watchdog concerns raise fresh doubts over whether the government’s age assurance trial overstated vendor compliance and safeguards.
New powers to demand subscriber data and force retention could broaden police access while reigniting privacy fears for Canadians.
Canada’s air traffic system may need fresh investment as drone and air mobility flights are forecast to top 21 million by 2045.
The deal could ease strain on understaffed call centres by automating routine non-emergency calls and redirecting escalations to 911 staff.