Digital Skills stories
Australian and New Zealand mid-sized firms will gain faster deployments and real-time people, payroll and finance insights from Workday GO.
Security, privacy and skills shortages are slowing Australian agencies, even as most weigh sovereign AI for defence and public health.
Faster site updates and fewer errors should help IAG reach more customers, after it cut 15 websites to one platform and 4,500 pages.
More than 642,000 young people in eight countries will gain AI and financial literacy lessons as the partnership enters its second year.
A GoTo survey finds many workers fear heavy AI use is eroding skills, while poor training and weak oversight are fuelling risks.
Adoption has surged to 17.4 million users, even as most Australians remain uneasy about tech firms' data use and ad-funded answers.
The milestone comes as Irish schools widen STEM and AI learning, with 1,000 pupils showcasing projects on rural safety, inclusion and sustainability.
More than 2,000 young women have taken part in a programme aimed at widening access to tech jobs as it expands across England.
Charities, small firms and fraud victims across Scotland got more than GBP £3 million in cyber support as the centre reinvested profits.
Backed by three major employers, the North East festival aims to draw employers, investors and talent to a week of tech events across the region.
Funding and skills shortages are leaving Australian agencies unable to safely deploy AI while keeping ageing systems resilient and under control.
Canadian employers are increasingly demanding AI skills, with Google's new course aimed at helping workers meet that expectation in under 10 hours.
Despite widespread adoption, most Indian enterprises still struggle to turn AI pilots into measurable gains because of data, governance and skills gaps.
Unmanaged AI use is exposing Australian firms to data leakage, compliance breaches and other risks as adoption outpaces oversight.
More learners in the West Midlands will get funded data training as iMeta's boot camp extension targets shortages in digital and AI skills.
With one in three firms still lacking basic protection, smaller UK businesses are facing a sharper threat and higher breach costs as attacks rise.
Burnout is rising as marketers race to master AI, while more than 70% of teams now work beyond sustainable capacity.
Despite regular use in study, most young Australians fear AI will destroy jobs rather than help them get hired.
Smaller firms risk being left behind unless ministers back AI infrastructure, training and accessible support, the body said.
The pact will widen use of AI in Singapore's public services, schools and labs, while adding new tests on safety, governance and inclusion.