Industry Insider

  • Make records capture easy to drive adoption

    Records & Information Management Month 2026 is underway. After years of working with organisations on records and information management, one lesson stands out clearly: if you want records captured, make capture easy.

  • Knowledge Unlocked with AFIVE AI Platform

    Fragmented enterprise knowledge stores have a new challenger. Sydney-based IT services firm Adactin has released AFIVE, an AI-powered platform that uses Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) to give employees natural language access to documents held across multiple cloud repositories.

  • New Zealand Proposes Mandatory Cyber Security Regime

    The New Zealand Government has released a discussion document proposing mandatory cyber security obligations for operators of critical infrastructure, including enforceable minimum standards, incident reporting requirements, and director-level accountability.

  • Why Data, Information, and AI Governance Can't Stay in Their Lanes

    If you've spent any time in governance, you've noticed something: we've been running three separate disciplines that are all trying to solve variations of the same problem. Data governance over here. Information governance over there. And now AI governance is showing up like a new kid at school, expecting everyone to make room.

  • Rethinking the Essential Eight: Cybersecurity in the Age of AI

    As someone working at the intersection of cybersecurity and public sector technology, I’ve long respected the Essential Eight framework developed by the Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC). It’s practical, actionable, and has helped lift the security posture across government agencies and critical infrastructure. But the world has changed. And so must our approach.

  • Ransom Payments Surge as Ransomware Groups Multiply

    Ransom payments climbed sharply in 2025, with 24% of ransomware victims paying - up from 14% the previous year - as the number of active threat groups rose 16% to 67, according to a new global report. The S-RM and FGS Global Cyber Incident Insights Report 2026, drawing on data from more than 800 incidents responded to globally in 2025, found the average ransom payment reached USD $296,000. Ransomware accounted for 45% of all incidents.

  • Make records capture easy to drive adoption

    Records & Information Management Month 2026 is underway. After years of working with organisations on records and information management, one lesson stands out clearly: if you want records captured, make capture easy.

  • Knowledge Unlocked with AFIVE AI Platform

    Fragmented enterprise knowledge stores have a new challenger. Sydney-based IT services firm Adactin has released AFIVE, an AI-powered platform that uses Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) to give employees natural language access to documents held across multiple cloud repositories.

  • New Zealand Proposes Mandatory Cyber Security Regime

    The New Zealand Government has released a discussion document proposing mandatory cyber security obligations for operators of critical infrastructure, including enforceable minimum standards, incident reporting requirements, and director-level accountability.

  • Why Data, Information, and AI Governance Can't Stay in Their Lanes

    If you've spent any time in governance, you've noticed something: we've been running three separate disciplines that are all trying to solve variations of the same problem. Data governance over here. Information governance over there. And now AI governance is showing up like a new kid at school, expecting everyone to make room.

  • Rethinking the Essential Eight: Cybersecurity in the Age of AI

    As someone working at the intersection of cybersecurity and public sector technology, I’ve long respected the Essential Eight framework developed by the Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC). It’s practical, actionable, and has helped lift the security posture across government agencies and critical infrastructure. But the world has changed. And so must our approach.

  • Ransom Payments Surge as Ransomware Groups Multiply

    Ransom payments climbed sharply in 2025, with 24% of ransomware victims paying - up from 14% the previous year - as the number of active threat groups rose 16% to 67, according to a new global report. The S-RM and FGS Global Cyber Incident Insights Report 2026, drawing on data from more than 800 incidents responded to globally in 2025, found the average ransom payment reached USD $296,000. Ransomware accounted for 45% of all incidents.