Facial recognition stories
Smaller hotels can now automate check-in in tighter lobby spaces, as Vendfun adds payment, ID scanning and loyalty enrolment to one unit.
Defenders face shorter patching windows as Check Point says AI can now turn new flaws into working exploits within hours.
Security teams face faster, harder-to-trace intrusions as AI is now being used to write attack code and run deception during breaches.
Platforms under pressure to protect minors can now verify users while keeping facial data on the device, after Incode's new tool debuted.
Airport operators in Asia and the Middle East face pressure to add capacity and modernise as traffic is forecast to surge over the decade.
Airports are using biometrics and artificial intelligence to absorb surging passenger numbers without costly new terminals or bigger frontline teams.
Passengers can now use facial recognition instead of documents at Doha airport, as a major rollout aims to cut queues and checks.
Rising fatigue and safety concerns are pushing Australian fleets towards in-cab video, with 53% already using it to cut risk.
Millions of test takers will face tighter checks as the British Council rolls out Daon's facial authentication across its global exams.
Busy reception desks will no longer need to inspect papers manually, as the kiosk adds timestamped identity checks for compliance-heavy sites.
Retailers are under growing pressure as live facial recognition flags prolific shoplifters, with June setting a record for alerts.
Repeat offenders are driving most violence at Australian shopping centres, prompting calls for technology and police partnerships to protect families and staff.
Retailers will get instant police warnings within four seconds when serious offenders are spotted, as theft and violence remain high.
The veteran sales chief says biometrics and payroll integration have reshaped workplace systems since he joined Tensor in 1986.
The new division aims to address a key weakness in AI tools that can complete tasks but still miss shifting human intent and trust in real time.
Banks could use continuous identity checks to curb rising takeover fraud, as the tie-up opens YEO Messaging to US financial institutions.
Rising regulatory scrutiny is pushing more buyers towards layered checks, after Liminal named Shufti a leader in age verification and estimation.
The selective rollout targets AI developers needing systems that adapt as users' confidence, intent and attention shift during interactions.
The deal gives banks and telecoms a way to share fraud signals without pooling customer data, as AI-driven scams surge worldwide.
With phishing and stolen credentials driving most breaches, organisations are being urged to replace passwords with passkeys for safer logins.