In Australia, the ACSC reports that the average cost of cybercrime to a business is about AUD$276,000. That's significant.
So when startups focus on this sector - everyone wins.
The latest, is a Swedish cyber startup founded by ex-Swedish government security officials and ex Israeli Unit 8200 members. Cyberty aims to deliver a plug-and-play solution for SMEs leveraging AI and machine learning to defend against advanced cyber threats.https://www.cyberty.io/general-9Image credit: The Nation
German revenue-generating startup Neurocat, provides consulting and product assistance with helping organisations build and demonstrate safety, trustworthiness and security into their AI products and platforms.
Is this tool (AIDKIT) and quality assurance approach the makings of a global-first AI certification process and seal of approval?https://www.neurocat.ai/
Image credit: Bamenny @ Pixabay
While COVID-19 has changed how we work, it’s certainly up-ending how we think of learning. Shifts in Micro-learning and more have been taking place preCOVID and now edutech startups are frontline investor focus. The latest, a Singapore based startup, Emeritus, used by some of the world’s top universities and other educational institutions for online courses, raised USD$650 million in a funding round led by SoftBank Group.Facebook’s founder Mark Zuckerberg’s charity is a current investor. Image by ElasticComputeFarm from Pixabayhttps://emeritus.org/
Recently funded US startup WellSaid Labs ($10M series A in July) has been spun out of the research NFP Allen Institute of Artificial Intelligence. They create life-like synthetic voices, from the voices of real people - great for corporate videos and more.https://wellsaidlabs.com/features/studioImage by CSTRSK from Pixabay
GitHub and OpenAI (Microsoft's latest investment) has released Copilot - an AI tool that works with coders/ developers/ programmers on the same project to speed up the development process. https://copilot.github.com/
Image credit: Defence-Imagery from Pixabay