Data classification stories
Fragmented enterprise data is slowing AI rollouts, and the new software aims to find, classify and govern it across mixed systems.
Rising AI costs and security gaps are pushing enterprises to tighten oversight as leaders demand clearer returns from deployments.
Regulated firms can let non-technical staff build apps in a controlled browser, using approved AI tools and existing security controls.
Demand for data governance is rising as regulated organisations spend more on AI, and RecordPoint is betting on partners to capture it.
Most organisations are exposed to AI security breaches, with AvePoint finding 88.4% suffered at least one incident in the past year.
The monthly offer bundles training, controls and remediation for Australian mid-market firms facing staff-driven cyber risk and AI-related exposure.
More firms are using AI daily, but AvePoint found unauthorised access incidents remain widespread as governance trails behind adoption.
Enterprises face mounting pressure to govern unstructured data for AI, after GigaOm again ranked Hitachi Vantara as a leader and fast mover.
IT teams can now spot oversharing and AI-readiness risks in Microsoft 365 from one chat window, as governance workloads rise.
Enterprises can now query file-based data in Snowflake and Databricks without first moving petabytes into a lakehouse, cutting AI prep delays.
Shared storage teams will gain tighter oversight and automation as the new software arrives for V5000 systems in late 2026.
Enterprises wrestling with AI readiness and data sovereignty may gain clearer governance as Everpure adds a new intelligence layer.
The funding values the cybersecurity group at USD $12 billion as enterprises race to secure data exposed to AI tools and agents.
Enterprise users can now feed governed file content into automated and AI workflows without custom code, reducing engineering overhead.
Organisations will need to widen cyber planning beyond a checklist as Australia moves to replace the Essential Eight with risk-based Essentials guidance.
Many defence contractors remain exposed as only 13% use software bills of materials and just 29% join industry threat-sharing groups.
Many defence suppliers still lack visibility into software risks, as more than a quarter reported a supply chain compromise last year.
The launch targets firms struggling to keep AI projects fed with clean, unified data as fragmented storage can leave GPUs idle.
Security teams can now rank privileged accounts by the sensitivity of data they can reach, helping cut alert noise and focus reviews.
Voluntary model reviews may leave gaps as advanced AI systems move closer to critical infrastructure and enterprise data.