Data Quality stories
The new releases aim to cut manual coding, tighten SAP integration and simplify student records as businesses seek embedded AI.
Pressure is growing on AI vendors and software suppliers to improve vulnerability disclosure as experts warn basic CVE details are no longer enough.
Most firms are revising incentives quarterly, but many still need up to two months to implement changes, a report says.
Many firms are failing to turn AI trials into production systems, with poor controls and weak data forcing almost half of projects to stall.
Managed service providers could cut manual effort and false compliance alerts as the update tightens asset links across security tools.
Better visibility across procurement and logistics has helped the electronics maker cut delays and lift touchless invoices to 87%.
Business teams can now run product data tasks via chat, as the new interface aims to cut manual work and speed launches across retail channels.
Fragmented information is curbing aviation’s return on a USD $50.8 billion technology bill as delays, AI and security efforts suffer.
The move gives the London-headquartered group full control of Latvian lender data services as it plans to expand investment and products.
UK finance leaders see AI mistakes and opaque outputs as the main obstacle to wider use, with trust beating speed in a Bloomberg poll.
The hire strengthens the New Zealand technology company's push into data and AI as clients demand tighter governance and stronger foundations for machine learning.
Ghost assets can distort reporting and compliance, with SoloTruth's new platform aiming to keep fixed-asset records aligned with reality.
Poor address records are driving misdeliveries, extra fuel use and customer churn, costing retailers GBP £11.60 a parcel on average.
More Kiwi firms are moving beyond AI pilots, prompting Avanade to bolster local delivery in New Zealand as demand for implementation grows.
Only 58% of UK tech staff have formal AI training, leaving daily users exposed to errors, privacy risks and weak oversight.
Custom-built agents could leave Irish boards carrying the full cost of AI errors, with fines and compliance failures possible under EU rules.
The new fund is intended to boost growth while giving the UK more control over data, chips and AI systems used by public services.
Australian retailers risk being overlooked as shoppers increasingly use AI tools to research and buy products without visiting brand websites.
Manufacturers saw faster technical support and enquiry handling, with one trial cutting response times by 67.3% and reducing manual effort.
Public bodies risk unfair or unlawful AI decisions unless they can trace datasets back to source, a Butterfly Data scientist said.