AI Monitoring (AIM) stories
Most IT staff say AI is adding scrutiny, trust checks and governance duties, offsetting time saved by automating routine work.
Businesses must now manage how AI systems interpret their brands, as Adobe sees discovery traffic from chat tools and browsers rising fast.
Many firms are failing to turn AI trials into production systems, with poor controls and weak data forcing almost half of projects to stall.
Funding will help Lua expand its developer community and partner network as demand for its AI agent software rises sharply.
Users can now monitor microservices and AI agents in a preconfigured stack, as OpenSearch 3.6 adds APM and tracing tools.
More than half of organisations have shipped AI tools, but quality problems and weak testing are leaving many projects stranded before production.
Boards are being pressed to oversee AI risks and pay-offs as nearly three-quarters are judged to have only limited expertise.
Businesses adopting agentic AI will get new governance and recovery tools as Commvault tries to reduce data risk and compliance worries.
AI assistants can now query live workflow status and diagnostics, reducing reliance on dashboards for regulated firms using Adeptia's software.
Developers can now deploy cloud-hosted Claude agents without building the supporting infrastructure, as Anthropic handles security, tracing and state management.
Workers using AI agents at work now have a vendor-neutral course to help them spot risks, manage oversight and distinguish them from chatbots.
Security teams face a wider gap as enterprise AI moves into production, with data governance and runtime controls often managed separately.
The recognition highlights growing demand for auditable AI, as regulated industries seek tools they can trust in live operations.
Enterprises deploying agentic AI are getting a new tool to spot data leaks, policy breaches and runaway costs before they spread.
Teams can now block toxic or sensitive AI output before it reaches customer data, inboxes and other business systems.
European mid-sized firms face tighter AI compliance demands as the EU AI Act pushes buyers towards auditable systems in sovereign infrastructure environments.
The Birmingham deep-tech firm is raising GBP £725,000 as demand grows for tools that govern AI behaviour in live settings.
Employers are struggling to prove AI spending is lifting output, as ActivTrak’s new tools measure adoption, governance and return on investment.
Enterprises using the platform will be able to test and monitor AI agents more closely as Sprinklr broadens automation across service, marketing and insights.
The funding will help Qodo expand globally as enterprises look for ways to verify AI-written code before it reaches production systems.