Operational Resilience: Artificial Intelligence Can Spot Threats Before They Happen
Australian Financial Review
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Details
- Date Published
- 24 Mar 2025
- Priority Score
- 2
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 24 Mar 2025, 11:29 am
Description
Australian organisations are drawing on improved technologies to alert them about when and how they need to act.
Summary
The article explores how Australian organizations are leveraging advancements in AI and automation to enhance operational resilience and predict potential threats before they occur. It highlights the role of AI in risk management, emphasizing increased capabilities in anticipating and mitigating incidents. While it does not delve deeply into existential threats or catastrophic AI risks, it underscores the practical application of AI in improving organizational resilience. The discussion is relevant to both Australian contexts and global interests in AI's role in operational security and risk management frameworks.
Body
TechnologyRisk managementPrint articleChristopher NiescheMar 25, 2025 – 5.00amSaveLog inorSubscribeto save articleShareCopy linkCopiedEmailLinkedInTwitterFacebookCopy linkCopiedShare via...Gift this articleSubscribe to gift this articleGift 5 articles to anyone you choose each month when you subscribe.Subscribe nowAlready a subscriber?LoginAustralian organisations are drawing on technologies such as artificial intelligence and automation to boost their operational resilience and to mitigate incidents when they occur.“Technology has moved the dial on resilience,” says Gavin Rosettenstein, a partner in third-party risk management at KPMG.Loading...SaveLog inorSubscribeto save articleShareCopy linkCopiedEmailLinkedInTwitterFacebookCopy linkCopiedShare via...Gift this articleSubscribe to gift this articleGift 5 articles to anyone you choose each month when you subscribe.Subscribe nowAlready a subscriber?LoginLicense articleFollow the topics, people and companies that matter to you.Find out moreRead MoreRisk managementKPMGAIAFR ReportsPagerDutyData analysisFetching latest articlesHow a dare set the pace for this CEO’s morning routine of rowingLauren SamsInside the homes of Australia’s most connected art collectors‘If Labor’s campaign is that I’m horrible, they’ll lose in a landslide’By the time he was 37 this exec was running IBM in AustraliaSally Patten and Lap PhanFour women who started businesses after the age of 45What happened when Domain learnt it spent $36m a year on meetingsThere are travel chargers, and then there’s the PlugBug TravelJohn DavidsonThe interior designer creating bourgeois spaces in EuropeIf you only have one day in Bar, Montenegro, do thisProperty billionaire Nick Andrianakos dies in GreeceYolanda RedrupCannon-Brookes describes ‘deep internal conflict’ over his private jetOscar Piastri on the secret of his $41m-a year success