Cyber Threat stories
The wins bolster Eventus Security's standing as demand rises for outsourced cyber defence, with enterprises seeking round-the-clock threat response.
Attackers are now exploiting flaws before patches exist, leaving 85% of vulnerable assets unpatched at disclosure across 10,000 organisations.
Mid-market clients across Australia and New Zealand gain broader cyber protection as the combined business reaches about 45 specialists.
MSPs can now add 24/7 threat monitoring and incident response without building their own security operations centre, as Acronis goes global.
Broader supplier chains and open standards are leaving mission-critical broadband networks more exposed as operators move to 4G and 5G.
Rising identity-based attacks and exposed cloud services are forcing Australian organisations to rethink security assumptions as threats accelerate.
Organisations remain exposed as malware in open-source packages surged in 2025, with most advisories and account takeovers reported last year.
Hidden software and poorly protected backups are leaving businesses more exposed to automated ransomware attacks, security experts warned.
The recognition underscores growing demand for managed security providers that can integrate with existing tools and improve response times for enterprises.
Organisations across the region are facing mounting disruption as attack volumes jump 36% year on year, with APIs a growing weak spot.
The win could boost Jazz's profile with enterprise buyers as the accelerator drew nearly 1,000 applicants and sought AI-driven security tools.
The move gives Ignition access to the world's largest cybersecurity market as it targets more than EUR €500 million in revenue within three years.
Australian operators face rising cyber risk as Rockwell warns poor visibility and unmanaged remote access can disrupt safety-critical systems.
Many enterprises still cannot prove they can restore data quickly enough as cloud, container and AI systems outpace traditional backup plans.
Nearly half of observed attacks never hit endpoints, pushing N-able to broaden detection across network, cloud and identity layers.
Rising nation-state cyber attacks are driving demand for earlier threat detection as the alliance targets government, defence and infrastructure buyers.
Brief, high-volume floods are increasingly overwhelming businesses, with technology, financial services and gaming among the hardest hit sectors.
Businesses relying only on endpoint tools could miss more than 137,000 network attacks, as perimeter threats took a larger share in 2025.
Growing use of cloud services and AI is widening cyber exposure for Australian businesses and households as security controls lag behind.
Most incidents led to shutdowns, supply chain disruption or lost sales, with many firms still leaving cyber risk outside the boardroom.