Data residency stories
Unstructured files that can sway deal value will be targeted by a new AI joint venture aimed at speeding M&A reviews and protecting sensitive records.
Enterprises under pressure to scale AI can now use Teradata's new platform to govern data and agents across cloud and on-premises systems.
Developers could soon build voice apps that handle tasks and translations in real time, as OpenAI adds three new audio models to its API.
The new system aims to cut infrastructure friction for firms shifting AI from pilots to always-on agents across cloud and on-premises setups.
Businesses can now retain customer context across voice, messaging and AI hand-offs as Twilio broadens its engagement platform.
Banks can now deploy more of their systems through one AWS-based stack as Temenos adds digital banking and payments to its cloud service.
Enterprises in regulated sectors can now query sensitive data in place, as Cloudera says the new ServiceNow link cuts duplication and compliance risk.
Task completion for AI agents could rise sharply as Pinecone’s Nexus aims to cut latency, token use and human review in enterprise workflows.
Businesses in New Zealand and Australia can now keep cloud data local as OVHcloud brings lower latency and residency compliance to Auckland.
It could ease compliance and data residency worries for firms that want to run OpenClaw agents without managing infrastructure themselves.
Regulated organisations can now run AI across distributed data while preserving access controls, audit trails and compliance boundaries.
Many small businesses are skipping backups altogether as a local partnership says it can cut cloud storage costs by up to 90%.
Australian businesses are pushing AI beyond pilots, prompting Glean to nearly double local headcount as ANZ customers rise more than 60 per cent.
Regulated businesses could gain a governed private AI stack as Rackspace plans to add AMD chips to its managed cloud offering.
Customers in Southeast Asia can now keep AI data closer to home, as Pinecone adds local residency and lower latency in Singapore.
UK organisations can now keep sensitive AI workloads onshore as Argyll’s new cloud aims to ease compliance, trust and energy concerns.
Customer experience fails when networks falter, with outages, latency and weak security now directly affecting trust and churn.
Australian sales teams should see faster response times as the CRM shifts local customer data onshore to meet residency demands.
Public sector and essential services could gain tighter AI controls as OneAdvanced’s IQ keeps data hosted in the UK and embeds governance rules.
The Kuala Lumpur hub will give Southeast Asian customers round-the-clock technical support as OceanBase pushes to win more regulated finance clients.