Fortune 500 stories
Firms using Anthropic's Claude can now track usage and costs more closely as Portal26 rolls out a free governance tier.
Security teams may get broader visibility into phishing campaigns as Doppel adds inbox defence to its platform for social engineering attacks.
The ranking highlights surging demand for AI-governance software, with the Dallas firm ahead of two Austin rivals on CNBC's list.
The new features promise to curb Kubernetes cloud spending by spotting stranded capacity that blocks cluster consolidation and auto-scaling.
Legacy systems and skills shortages are slowing AI rollouts at large German companies, with only 19% putting it into core processes.
Businesses need a single view of AI agents as their access and ownership can change in real time across cloud and internal systems.
Security teams get real-time risk scoring for AI agents as Radiant Logic extends its identity platform across fragmented registries.
Java developers using Spring will get faster fixes as Broadcom backs day-zero patch access and more secure dependency builds for paying customers.
Teams can now map downstream risks across Salesforce, Snowflake and Data 360 before making changes, cutting manual checks and compliance gaps.
Enterprise security teams can now use AI prompts to renew or revoke certificates without bypassing Sectigo's approval and audit controls.
Poor data quality is forcing finance teams to seek more traceable inputs for AI and reporting as OneStream adds a Snowflake link.
New mandates in Europe, the Middle East and Asia-Pacific are forcing multinationals to juggle varied e-invoicing rules across 150 countries.
Enterprises in India and beyond stand to gain a single vendor for AI infrastructure and software as the firms target GCC demand and global expansion.
Rising vulnerability volumes are outpacing fix times, prompting HackerOne to roll out an AI system that feeds confirmed threats into developer tools.
It could help enterprises avoid costly replatforming, as the firms link governed data access with AI tools across distributed systems.
The move targets vulnerabilities in software used by large firms, as AI makes it easier to find and exploit flaws.
Shares in the software group now trade in New York and Stockholm, giving Hexagon investors access to the newly independent business on both markets.
Customers can now manage the full certificate lifecycle in one place as Sectigo targets expiry risks and quantum-ready testing.
The funding will help London-based Apoha commercialise a liquid data layer already used by Boehringer Ingelheim and other pharma groups.
The Belfast software supply chain security firm is bolstering financial and legal controls as it seeks more enterprise customers after a USD $72 million round.