AI Safety stories
Toronto-based AI PropTech platform lists top realtor Peter Torkan as it expands its real estate marketplace and agent network across the city.
Personalised prompts will now be triggered by risky AI-assisted code, as firms seek earlier controls on developer behaviour and data exposure.
Many firms are exposing sensitive data as shadow AI and weak controls leave them open to breaches, hallucinations and unauthorised access.
The new OMVI range could cut costs for homes and businesses by replacing multi-camera setups with one device that tracks subjects in 360 degrees.
Enterprises are turning to governed AI tools as Snowflake and Anthropic expand Claude access across Cortex AI for sensitive data workflows.
It may help regulated customers use archived data for AI without moving sensitive records into separate systems, reducing compliance risk.
The registry is tightening checks after malicious uploads exposed a gap between declared skill purpose and actual behaviour.
Enterprises get a single control layer for AI agents and data as Snowflake adds security and governance tools to curb errors and misuse.
The package aims to cut development time and curb compliance risks as firms deploy AI agents into HR, finance and IT workflows.
Early access to Anthropic's Mythos in Australia is helping Rubrik scan its code for flaws before attackers can exploit them.
Developers can now manage multiple AI coding agents in one place as GitHub tests a desktop Copilot app with worktree automation and review tools.
Gartner warns most AI projects may fail as enterprises struggle to track sensitive data that new tools and agents can access.
Enterprises will get tighter AI controls as Snowflake adds blocking policies, multi-party authorisation and new agentic tools at Summit.
Windows users can now run trillion-parameter AI models locally as NVIDIA targets enterprise developers with a deskside workstation and new security controls.
Existing medical malpractice and cyber policies may leave hospitals exposed as AI-related claims rise and liabilities spread across vendors.
The bigger risk is persuasive but unreliable analysis, as common law tools must preserve source-backed reasoning or misstate precedent.
The hire bolsters Geordie's push to help enterprises govern AI agents, as it expands after a USD $30 million funding round.
The appointment signals a push to help regulated firms deploy AI agents without risking data leaks or unauthorised actions in sensitive systems.
Controlled US availability means customers can now unify network, security and AI operations in one place, with external tools included.
Despite rising cyber maturity, most large organisations still lack basic protections against AI-specific attacks such as prompt injection, Wavestone says.