Data governance stories
Businesses under pressure to prove AI returns may use Qlik's new advisory service to sift viable agentic projects from broad ambitions.
Law firms could cut client disputes as Elite’s new tool spots subjective billing risks before invoices are submitted.
Poor data could now trigger bad AI actions, as Qlik adds trust scores, alerts and stewardship tools to its analytics platform.
The new release could help data teams cut manual pipeline work and deliver fresher data for AI and analytics without extra complexity.
It is aimed at cutting manual reformatting and reconciliation of inconsistent custodian records for wealth managers handling multi-source portfolio data.
Business users could get answers in natural language without moving sensitive data, as Starburst adds AIDA to its Enterprise Platform.
Poor master data can leave firms overpaying duties, missing sustainability targets and struggling to trace suppliers as tariffs shift.
Most firms lack the live, governed data needed for autonomous AI, with 66% of executives saying real-time access is non-negotiable.
Boards are being pressed to oversee AI risks and pay-offs as nearly three-quarters are judged to have only limited expertise.
The bank says the new framework is already routing 90 per cent of commercial emails and cutting manual work by 70 per cent.
Many self-described AI leaders in finance are still using it only in limited workflows because governance and data foundations are incomplete.
Customers can now move from insight to execution as Qlik expands its agentic analytics tools with prediction, automation and third-party AI access.
Public bodies risk unfair or unlawful AI decisions unless they can trace datasets back to source, a Butterfly Data scientist said.
Most Irish data and AI professionals are staying put as employers prepare to expand teams and compete for scarce talent.
Stricter data and AI rules are pushing enterprises to demand more control over where workloads run and how they are governed.
Businesses in finance and healthcare could gain clearer rules for using datasets as collateral, licensing revenue and investment under the new law.
New powers to demand subscriber data and force retention could broaden police access while reigniting privacy fears for Canadians.
Businesses could cut delays and duplicate work as Konverge puts AI inside workflows, while keeping human oversight for compliance.
More charities could gain digital expertise as up to 30 women are trained for trustee roles under a new board-matching pilot.
The move should help Videosign add AI note-taking and form-filling tools without compromising compliance, security or cloud costs.