Startups stories
Singapore’s AI developer scene is set for a bigger global spotlight, with more than 2,000 people expected at a sold-out conference.
Investors overseeing USD $350 billion in assets will join more than 300 startups in Singapore as AI shifts towards industrial uses.
Insurers face tighter pricing pressure as offshore wind farms in Europe expand into deeper waters and more exposed storm regimes.
The world may face faster job losses and cyber risks than many expect as OpenAI urges governments to debate AI rules before decisions turn urgent.
Merchants will gain a single connection to open banking payments and fraud checks as the two fintechs combine routing data and bank identity tools.
Women still make up just 22% of the tech workforce, and leaders say confidence gaps and male-dominated spaces are holding back more progress.
Europe's push to fund frontier technologies will take centre stage at London Tech Week 2026 as organisers add a Deep Tech Stage.
Digital asset markets gained a fresh vote of confidence as the Brussels-based firm secured Series C funding and a USD $1.1 billion valuation.
With private companies staying off public markets for longer, millions of shareholders face costly delays in selling holdings or raising cash.
Beta testing showed the platform can cut manual work quickly, completing more than 350 automations in under two weeks at one organisation.
The appointment comes as Australia’s fintech sector pushes for rules that could lift its economic contribution from $13.6 billion to $38 billion by 2035.
The badge could help the cloud unit win larger customers seeking tighter cost control, automation and security across AWS estates.
Defence tech is drawing fresh investor interest as the Brisbane fund says committed capital has reached AUD $17 million, led by Steve Baxter.
A new report warns that poorly targeted AI is adding work rather than profit for many online merchants, despite some sharp gains.
Despite a population surge, Canada’s patent count barely moved in 2024, underscoring a widening gap between research and domestic investment.
The Cambridge startup has joined a shortlist of more than 900 firms vying for a national prize as it seeks more work from event operators.
The shortlist spans the island and includes firms employing more than 3,000 people, as EY marks the 29th year of its award programme.
The deal will give Canberra access to AI risk findings and usage data as Anthropic expands research support and plans a Sydney office.
Irish firms could miss AI gains unless leaders back clear use cases, staff skills and infrastructure to turn trials into value.
Funding will help the London fintech expand its US push and AI tools after its valuation passed USD $1 billion.