Kubernetes stories
Businesses running AI agents may now route incident response and observability data through New Relic's new tools, aimed at cutting operational toil.
Cloud providers facing the end of VMware's CSP programme in 2027 can now tap migration tools and new pricing to protect margins.
Enterprises wrestling with AI workload failures and infrastructure bottlenecks may use the new tool to automate incident response and service assurance.
The acquisition aims to curb standing privileges as firms grapple with AI agents and machine identities reaching sensitive systems.
The new service is aimed at reducing downtime and data loss for enterprises running Kubernetes and virtual machines across hybrid HPE environments.
Rising AI costs and weaker oversight are pushing enterprises to demand tighter controls as token use spreads across clouds and in-house models.
Research centres can now keep existing Lustre and GPFS data in place as Fuzzball 4.0 adds Azure support, caching and a registry.
The platform aims to cut idle cloud spend for Kubernetes users, with DevZero saying it can shift workloads live as demand changes without restarts.
Most financial institutions now see unsanctioned AI use as a business risk, with 86% of IT executives warning of weak oversight.
The new features promise to curb Kubernetes cloud spending by spotting stranded capacity that blocks cluster consolidation and auto-scaling.
Users can now route AI and HPC jobs across five clouds and on-premises through one workflow, cutting rebuilds and manual reconfiguration.
Millions of downloads were exposed to silent code execution as a flaw in Hugging Face Transformers let malicious models run on load.
Outages in Kubernetes clusters can now be triaged automatically inside AI tools, cutting the time on-call engineers spend hunting root causes.
Security teams may get a single set of controls for AI agents across clouds as Aviatrix enforces Microsoft policy rules at network level.
The addition gives companies a shared layer for securing and routing AI traffic as agentic systems move into production.
Firms racing to deploy generative AI are exposing themselves to data incidents and compliance gaps, Wallarm says, as oversight lags.
Akamai and NVIDIA are expanding their security partnership to embed Zero Trust controls into AI factory infrastructure.
The move targets vulnerabilities in software used by large firms, as AI makes it easier to find and exploit flaws.
The launch targets firms struggling to keep AI projects fed with clean, unified data as fragmented storage can leave GPUs idle.
Enterprises managing remote sites could cut exposure by combining central container control with outbound-only security.