Cloud adoption stories
The appointments bolster Google Cloud's push for AI and cloud growth in Southeast Asia, as competition intensifies across key markets.
Korean banks and agencies can now keep security logs in-country as Google Cloud tries to ease compliance worries over cloud-based threat monitoring.
The appointment gives the acquirer a central technology lead as it tries to speed AI adoption across 13 independently run software businesses.
Dutch ministries can now adopt Google Cloud after a privacy review found no known high data protection risks if safeguards are applied.
Banks under regulatory pressure may be able to modernise databases without moving sensitive records to public cloud infrastructure.
The funding will help the London-based consultancy expand through acquisitions and into new markets as demand for digital change and security grows.
Law firms can now cut hidden document data from Outlook attachments without maintaining their own server infrastructure.
Budget pressure is pushing security teams to prove ROI, while integration and staffing gaps continue to shape buying decisions this year.
Enterprises could cut identity migration work from months to days as SailPoint makes its new AI-based cloud upgrade tool free for some customers.
Customers moving ageing identity systems to the cloud could cut migration time and engineering effort, SailPoint says, with no extra fee.
Government buyers will gain wider access to Checkmarx tools as Carahsoft opens procurement routes through reseller networks and federal contracts.
Indian banks and manufacturers will get local support as meshIQ and Dataeko join forces to manage hybrid middleware estates more easily.
Organisations will need to widen cyber planning beyond a checklist as Australia moves to replace the Essential Eight with risk-based Essentials guidance.
Recent breaches have exposed how weak vendor oversight is leaving schools and businesses more vulnerable to supply chain attacks.
The hires underscore Tata Communications' push to win more corporate spending on cloud, security and AI-led network services.
It offers firms a cheaper way to align technology with strategy while reducing duplication, technical debt and security risk.
The move comes as US agencies shift from planning to implementation of post-quantum cryptography, exposing legacy systems to future quantum attacks.
The hire supports Constl's fibre expansion in India, where better internal systems are becoming crucial for serving telecom and cloud customers.
The recognition underscores growing demand for cyber advisers who can tie technical decisions to business risk as threats and cloud use intensify.
Rising AI use is making cloud bills harder to predict, with 85% of organisations saying cost control is now their main cloud challenge.