Business Continuity stories
Businesses in Australia and New Zealand are more likely to see outages hit revenue, with 52% reporting direct top-line damage.
Existing Threat Scan customers get new free tools to spot ransomware in backups before restoration, reducing the risk of reinfecting production systems.
Untested restore drills could leave firms facing longer outages, lost revenue and reputational damage when ransomware or system failures hit.
Rising data volumes and AI are forcing Australian firms to cut storage waste, tighten governance and test backups before breaches hit.
Many firms still lack recoverable copies of critical data as ransomware increasingly targets cloud and SaaS systems, experts warn.
Remote Australian and New Zealand sites will get faster access to edge AI and private 5G as Wavelink builds a new partner channel.
It aims to cut ransomware downtime by giving organisations a live map of assets and dependencies drawn from more than 60 data sources.
Customers should see fewer outages after the Vilnius site added redundant power and cooling, with no downtime during the upgrade.
Many firms still fail to test SaaS recovery properly, leaving identity outages able to cut off access to other core applications.
Managed service providers risk missing client needs if they chase AI hype first, Ian Groves told an industry event in London.
Enterprises could cut in-house patching as the deal brings supported, security-focused database container images to production environments.
Smaller defence suppliers risk losing contracts as many underestimate the paperwork and evidence needed to pass new cyber checks.
Outages and opaque AI decisions are pushing APAC firms to use observability to keep automated systems reliable, accountable and compliant.
Rising costs and policy uncertainty are squeezing small firms, with 63% of owners reporting lower revenue and confidence subdued across the sector.
Many firms still fail recovery tests, leaving cyber attacks or outages able to halt services and expose critical data.
Demand for round-the-clock cyber defence is pushing Slipstream Cyber to strengthen its operations as attacks become faster and more complex.
Most UK organisations lack full visibility of AI tools in use, leaving security teams slower to spot breaches and respond to incidents.
Hospital patients still rely on phone lines for urgent care updates, leaving trusts wary of telephony changes as the PSTN switch-off looms.
New reporting deadlines are pushing critical UK firms to secure trusted communications when cyber attacks knock out internal systems.
Only 42% of Australian organisations back up all workloads, leaving many exposed when ransomware or hardware failures hit.