IBM stories
The hires underscore Tata Communications' push to win more corporate spending on cloud, security and AI-led network services.
Enterprises can now patch older open source software without disruptive upgrades, as IBM and Red Hat target stubborn vulnerability backlogs.
The appointments signal a sharper partner-led route to market as the software group pushes AI deeper into customer service systems used by thousands.
By replacing spreadsheets and manual finance work, the new platform aims to cut months-long implementation times and free staff for higher-value tasks.
The ranking could help EDB win larger enterprises seeking to run analytics and AI closer to core data without adding more specialist systems.
The hires underline a partner-led push as identity security vendors increasingly rely on managed services to win and retain customers.
North American expansion is now being funded as the startup targets cloud risks introduced at the design stage, not after deployment.
Growing enterprise demand has prompted V2 AI to add senior leadership as it tackles rising AI spending across Australia and Asia-Pacific.
Hackers are already hoarding encrypted data, as businesses race to adopt quantum-safe protection before Q-Day arrives.
Enterprises can now run AI agents on live PostgreSQL data with governance controls, as EDB expands its Postgres AI platform.
Backed by Amazon, Google and Microsoft, the scheme aims to speed fixes for flaws that could ripple through banks, hospitals and power grids.
AI and HPC users could cut storage costs as WD's new designs shift colder data to hard drives while keeping active workloads on NVMe.
Enterprise security teams gain a new AI-assisted way to spot exploitable code flaws, as IBM widens its cyber work with OpenAI.
The move aims to help defenders turn faster vulnerability discovery into working fixes, as OpenAI broadens access to its cyber tools and partners.
The pact aims to help enterprises patch vulnerable open source code faster without forcing disruptive upgrades to production systems.
IBM research shows Canadian organisations are expanding AI use while governance, workforce skills and oversight struggle to keep pace.
Insurers under growing scrutiny over cyber exposures can now track live portfolio risk and unresolved vulnerabilities across insured organisations.
Tech and software groups are most at risk as breaches, supplier access and stale credentials let attackers reach source code and customer data.
Businesses in New Zealand want better productivity and AI support, and HP has named a veteran executive to help meet that demand.
Australia risks missing billions in economic gains unless more girls choose technology and engineering at school, experts warn.