Critical Infrastructure stories
The partnership could help uncover critical flaws faster as AI-driven attacks and machine identities raise the stakes for infrastructure security.
The French start-up will use the cash to move from research to industrial production, with its first commercial system due by the end of 2026.
The wider rollout targets critical infrastructure and software maintainers after early users found more than 10,000 serious flaws.
The French start-up will use the cash to industrialise silicon-based quantum hardware and prepare its first cloud product for 2026.
Demand for local AI development is reshaping HP's PC line-up, with new laptops, mini desktops and secure systems aimed at developers and enterprises.
The partnership could speed up flaw detection and patching for critical software used by businesses and public sector organisations across the region.
The update aims to stop conflicting writes across sites in critical sectors such as banking and payments, reducing reconciliation risk.
Banks and investment firms face mounting exposure as ransomware incidents jump and more than half of vendors carry high-severity flaws.
Field teams in Australia and New Zealand gain Windows 11 tablets that can run offline in remote sites, hazardous zones and harsh conditions.
The ruling gives French critical-site buyers a benchmark for high-assurance access control as cyber and physical security risks converge.
Early access to Anthropic's Mythos in Australia is helping Rubrik scan its code for flaws before attackers can exploit them.
Boards will get clearer visibility of cyber threats as the new software ties vulnerability data to strategic priorities and business impact.
It aims to cut the manual work that leaves many connected-device networks exposed, by turning risk data into enforced policy automatically.
The restricted model could speed up vulnerability fixes across Cohesity's platform as AI intensifies both attack and defence in critical software.
Mining operators are set to gain safer, more reliable site connectivity as Epiroc adds Ericsson's LTE and 5G products to its portfolio.
More than 3,000 transport leaders will gather in Detroit next year as the programme expands to cover cybersecurity, AI and autonomous shuttles.
Support from a defence-backed seed fund will help Hexigone expand abroad as its lower-toxicity corrosion tech targets ships, rigs and industry.
Growing fears over disruption are pushing consumers and providers to favour European control of payments as reliance on US networks deepens.
Quantum computing scale-up OQC will use fresh capital to expand overseas and develop systems as demand for commercial access grows.
New procurement rules could keep critical emergency and health systems in local hands, as Catalyst warns reliance on offshore vendors raises costs and risks.