Regulation stories
Families in Singapore can now give children controlled access to overseas spending, with limits, monitoring and no foreign transaction fees.
The tie-up could speed customer service automation for regulated sectors, with first joint deals already closed and roll-outs due in weeks.
Investors and policymakers risk missing key assets as Beauhurst says the UK's largest firms use more than 37,000 registered entities.
Rising scrutiny over AI and cloud power use has pushed the datacentre operator to cut water intensity sharply and boost local supplies.
Unsanctioned AI tools and siloed IT systems are widening risk for hospitals, as 88% say on-site infrastructure is not ready.
Banks and insurers in Australia and New Zealand will gain new checks as AI-made forgeries increasingly evade standard identity verification tools.
The banking software group is betting on AI-led growth as it seeks to expand its reach across more than 1,300 institutions.
Banks could gain a single AI system for customer requests, as Backbase folds Kasisto's tools into its software and boosts its US reach.
Businesses can now take stablecoin payments without holding crypto, as collections are auto-converted into local currency through treasury tools.
Higher electricity costs are putting Europe at a disadvantage as investors choose locations for the power-hungry AI data centres they need.
European firms can now embed regulated accounts and cards into their apps as bunq widens its banking-as-a-service push beyond Blockrise.
Customers can now quiz Starling's app before sending money, as UK fraud losses climb and romance scams hit savers hardest.
The shift to AI that can act, not just summarise, raises new questions over auditability, data residency and who controls operations.
Strained household budgets and rising use of AI search are forcing brands to offer clearer value if they want Australians to stay loyal.
The software aims to stop printed and scanned documents slipping outside managed workflows, a growing compliance risk for AI-heavy firms.
Britain's industrial projects could gain faster approvals as the London-based firm takes its AI certification platform beyond carbon removal.
Banks face mounting pressure to keep AI, customer data and audit trails inside their own systems as regulatory scrutiny tightens.
Regulatory scrutiny is pushing employers to keep people in hiring decisions, as AI takes on admin rather than replacing HR staff.
Logistics firms could cut staffing and operating costs as the startup uses the new funding to expand AI agents into billing, compliance and dispatch.
Fraud checks and customer service will be sped up as Lloyds Banking Group adds more than 1,000 AI jobs and retrains staff.