Germany stories
Despite widespread confidence, only 32% of firms test AI disaster recovery plans monthly, leaving identity and SaaS access exposed to outages.
More than half of UK and Irish hospitality businesses fear AI could expose customer and company data, a new survey shows.
Check Point Research says a better affiliate payout is helping the gang spread fast, with more than 320 claimed victims since mid-2025.
AI tools have surfaced customer records and other sensitive files at 29% of firms, highlighting weak Microsoft 365 governance.
Despite widespread confidence in governance, UK companies are already seeing AI tools surface sensitive data as Copilot rollouts accelerate.
European firms can now keep password data in Amsterdam, easing GDPR worries as Passpack adds local-language support for six markets by May 2026.
Manufacturers could gain faster disruption warnings and automated responses as SAP embeds AI agents into core supply chain workflows.
Public sector and critical infrastructure operators will gain more control over sensitive systems as Cisco broadens on-premises support across EMEA.
British households pay less than many Western peers for fixed-line broadband, with the UK placed 70th in a 214-country price league.
App marketers can now measure television buys against installs in real time, as connected TV ad spend approaches USD $45 billion.
Industrial users could cut downtime and cyber risk as TeamViewer’s latest update brings plug-and-play remote access and AI-guided maintenance support.
Ransomware hit manufacturers hardest in 2025 as incidents climbed 56 per cent, with ageing factory systems and suppliers widening exposure.
Microsecond fault isolation could help operators of data centres and industrial sites cut downtime as direct current networks expand.
Irish executives are saving time with AI, but the country still ranks as the most wary of its impact among four European markets.
Many UK IT leaders say open source could reduce reliance on a single AI vendor, even as most lack robust governance for autonomous tools.
The new robot is aimed at factory and warehouse tasks that have long resisted automation because conditions, inputs and handling change constantly.
UK office staff lose nearly two working days a week to admin, leaving many disengaged and prompting some to consider quitting.
By linking training to live workflows, the Berlin start-up aims to help firms turn more of their learning spend into measurable execution.
The test could ease factory labour shortages by proving humanoid robots can handle repetitive logistics work alongside staff in live production settings.
Researchers could face legal uncertainty unless ministers modernise a 1990 cyber law that campaigners say is hindering defence and investment.