GitHub stories
The free tool could help organisations curb discriminatory wording in news, healthcare and HR content as trust in AI remains low in Canada.
The designation underlines rising demand for cyber recovery and AI-era data protection as enterprises shift from backup alone to broader resilience.
Security teams gain wider visibility into risky AI agent activity as Exabeam doubles behavioural detections and adds Claude telemetry.
Developers can now add authentication and access controls earlier in AI-built apps, as Ory's free plugins plug identity tools into coding agents.
Pharmaceutical researchers could speed up discovery workflows as Anthropic's new Claude Science beta gains access to NVIDIA's BioNeMo tools.
Business teams can now build AI-led service journeys without engineering support, as AWS previews a no-code designer for Amazon Connect Customer.
Developer-sales teams gain a wider pool of buyers to target as the graph now tracks engineers across 30,000 technologies and 250 functions.
The Serbian startup will use the cash to expand an open-source control plane that lets engineers supervise AI-driven production workflows safely.
Backed by Amazon, Google and Microsoft, the scheme aims to speed fixes for flaws that could ripple through banks, hospitals and power grids.
Users of Dify's cloud service could have had private chats and files exposed after Zafran Security disclosed four flaws in the AI platform.
By focusing on evidence and small reversible changes, loop engineering could curb costly AI coding mistakes before they reach production.
Businesses running AI agents may now route incident response and observability data through New Relic's new tools, aimed at cutting operational toil.
Developers using Kimchi can now route tasks to MiniMax M3, cutting costs and keeping code inside controlled enterprise environments.
More than half of Vercel deployments are now triggered by coding agents, as monthly AI token traffic has jumped tenfold.
Users can now tie design work to coding and workplace tools, as Anthropic widens Claude Design's reach across teams and projects.
Public release of the Mini Shai-Hulud code means copycat attacks can now hit developers, CI/CD systems and open-source supply chains.
Developers using .NET gain a free open-source alternative after licensing changes left thousands of organisations seeking continuity for sign-in systems.
U.S. agencies can now train and keep control of AI models on isolated systems, with Palantir and NVIDIA targeting sensitive government work.
Tech and software groups are most at risk as breaches, supplier access and stale credentials let attackers reach source code and customer data.
Software teams could catch regressions before release as the new verifier checks pull requests against live production behaviour inside existing workflow tools.