Critical Infrastructure stories
World Cup betting traffic has become a target for denial-of-service campaigns, with one European operator hit by 19 million malicious requests.
Seven in 10 respondents reported detection gaps, as a survey found many airports and operators still lack a formal counter-drone plan.
Attackers are already using AI to exploit flaws faster than many organisations can detect them, Five Eyes agencies warned.
Supplier breaches are amplifying disruption, with ransomware incidents in Europe rising 55.1% year on year in the first four months of 2026.
The tie-up aims to cut Europe's reliance on overseas chip ecosystems by certifying SUSE software for Openchip's RISC-V hardware.
Remote responders and field teams gain a faster way to restore communications where fixed networks are absent or damaged.
Measured investor demand and steady domestic capital kept Australia and New Zealand property dealmaking resilient despite weaker sentiment and higher caution.
Consumers on hospitality and eCommerce sites are at risk of having passwords and payment details stolen through fake webpages run by the platform.
The hire is aimed at sharpening Indigo's push into hyperscaler and network accounts as competition intensifies across international connectivity markets.
Regulated sectors could gain tighter control of credentials as the pair combines software and hardware to cut vendor dependence.
The funding will speed deployment of a service aimed at helping governments spot threats to cables, pipelines and shipping routes from orbit.
The attack underscores how older broadcast equipment can be used to sow confusion and erode trust in Israel's civil defence systems during wartime.
Backed by Amazon, Google and Microsoft, the scheme aims to speed fixes for flaws that could ripple through banks, hospitals and power grids.
More than 80% of infrastructure executives have resilience plans, but fragmented data is preventing them from delivering them under climate stress.
Stolen credentials are fuelling fraud as attackers bypass ATO controls, exposing taxpayers and forcing tax agents to harden logins.
Many defence contractors remain exposed as only 13% use software bills of materials and just 29% join industry threat-sharing groups.
Australia's digital economy gains a major boost as a 5,000 km subsea route adds redundancy and capacity across the main capital cities.
Australian airports and utilities could soon use dog-like robots to inspect risky sites, as Datacom and Lenovo roll out AI systems.
Shared fibre routes can leave supposedly redundant links exposed to the same outage, a risk growing as AI workloads demand uninterrupted connectivity.
Australian firms risk losing AI advantage if core models and pricing stay offshore, as sovereign control becomes a resilience and trust issue.