AI Adoption stories
Enterprises scaling autonomous AI agents now have a way to enforce policies, track GPU costs and shut down idle environments automatically.
Accounting firms could cut admin bottlenecks as Canopy’s new AI tool handles onboarding, billing checks and document chasing inside its platform.
The hires are intended to help EvoluteIQ convert its USD $53 million investment into faster international growth and stronger customer demand.
Law firms can now automate more routine work as the platform adds off-the-shelf tools and customisation for specialist legal workflows.
Enterprises in regulated sectors can now query sensitive data in place, as Cloudera says the new ServiceNow link cuts duplication and compliance risk.
Large companies could cut weeks of analysis to minutes as Aera links conversational AI to governed, auditable business actions.
Despite near-universal enthusiasm, only 27% of organisations say their data and workflows are connected enough to support AI success.
Demand for AI tools is driving a broader regional push, with the company opening a larger Sydney base and training 100,000 learners.
A shortage of AI implementation talent is pushing mid-sized companies to seek help embedding Claude into operations, as Anthropic and backers launch a new venture.
A shortage of skilled partners is slowing wider adoption of Palantir Foundry and AIP, creating an opening for Vanyar in the commercial market.
The accreditation could reassure enterprises wary of sharing sensitive data with AI systems, as DevRev seeks to prove its controls meet security demands.
More than half of public sector IT staff say artificial intelligence has added work, as fragmented systems and policy gaps complicate adoption.
A lack of visibility is leaving many European organisations unable to tell whether AI-powered attacks have already breached their systems.
European developers can now access a single-model image API that Luma says should cut latency and improve consistency across visual workflows.
Concern is growing over who controls AI decisions, even as 74% of UK consumers have used the technology in the past six months.
Most Australians would adopt AI sooner if tougher safeguards were in place, yet only 1% say they completely trust the technology.
Despite widespread trust and security fears, 15% of Singapore consumers have used autonomous AI in the past six months, EY found.
It aims to curb staff data leaks into public AI tools by giving Australian employers visibility and controls over what workers share.
Most firms still avoid the technology, but adoption in UK transport and storage has jumped to 27.1%, according to ONS data.
Public sector and essential services could gain tighter AI controls as OneAdvanced’s IQ keeps data hosted in the UK and embeds governance rules.