Sports Technology (SportsTech) stories
Lapsed marks, imprecise registrations and unresolved NFT disputes are exposing sports brands to costly legal fights and lost exclusivity.
New contracts in Australia and Ireland give the Edinburgh sports tech group a foothold in coach analytics as bodies seek cheaper, consistent review.
The award may help Conflow win more deals for its solar iLamp units, which it says can fund themselves while running AI locally.
Clubs could recover millions as the partnership aims to cut illicit match streams before they spread and erode broadcast-rights value.
Hybrid wireless systems are emerging as the answer for packed sports venues that need reliable mobile service for fans, staff and operations.
Fitness operators may see less admin as Hapana rolls out a rebuilt, AI-enabled platform after its recent funding boost.
At Albert Park, F1 insiders reveal how sharper data use, tighter security and resilience planning combine to unlock race-winning performance.
Okta warns that surging numbers of uncontrolled AI agents pose a major identity and access risk as they become the new digital workforce.
Supporters will see more personalised digital offers as the club uses AI to track engagement, conversion and fan sentiment across channels.
Seven start-ups sought EUR 9.5 million at a Cork investor event as AxisBIC said demand for early-stage technology funding is rising.
The showcase highlighted early-stage ventures tackling clinical delays, relationship support and school safety as finalists pitched to investors and local firms.
The award lifts Areto’s profile as it expands software that has blocked more than 229,000 fraud attempts and illegal streams in a year.
Players, volunteers and supporters in England are set for smoother rugby services as the RFU hands Capgemini day-to-day digital operations.
Race analysis that once took hours can now be done in minutes, giving NASCAR quicker insight into fan views and on-track competition.
Irish tech start-ups with up to USD $15 million in revenue can now seek a Dublin final and a place in Lisbon next year.
The expanded tie-up gives Collingwood extra protection for member and supporter data as cyber threats intensify across Australian sport.
Stupa Sports wins BWF approval for its AI instant review system, promising cheaper, portable line calls for badminton tournaments worldwide.
Manchester City appoints N-able as official cyber partner to safeguard its expanding digital operations and global fan data footprint.
Gloucestershire-based Emerge Digital gains B Corp status as it expands into AI with ApexAI and extends its Gloucester Rugby tech deal.
Lexar will debut Argentina football-themed storage at Convergence India 2026, previewing new AFA portable SSDs for fans and creators.