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  • Kunlavut Vitidsarn and Janjaem Suwannapheng named Thailand flagbearers

    Kunlavut Vitidsarn and Janjaem Suwannapheng named Thailand flagbearers

    Thailand has selected two of its leading athletes, Kunlavut Vitidsarn and Janjaem Suwannapheng, to serve as flagbearers for the host nation at the 33rd SEA Games, set to take place from 9–20 December. The announcement was confirmed by the…

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  • AI Agents in Ireland: Building Trust for Enterprise Value — Insight

    AI Agents in Ireland: Building Trust for Enterprise Value — Insight

    Early benefits are visible. While 53% of Irish firms report productivity gains from AI agents, only 38% see cost savings. This highlights the gap between task efficiency and enterprise impact. Trust is particularly thin: just 7% express high trust in agents across multiple functions.

    Why trust is the bottleneck

    The impact of low trust is not abstract; especially for specific high stakes activities. No Irish respondents report high trust in agents to conduct financial transactions, only 4% for autonomous customer interactions, and 9% for data analysis and insights.

    Companies hesitate to hand over critical decisions to systems they can’t fully audit, govern, or explain. This explains why measurable value is lagging despite investment intent.

    In parallel, the 2026 Global Digital Trust Insights Survey shows a world grappling with other data-related tensions: 41% of Irish organisations are adopting AI and machine learning to strengthen their cyber defence, while globally managed services are being used to support AI (38%), threat management (28%), data protection (27%) and third-party risk (17%).

    Yet, 39% of respondents globally indicate that a data breach has cost their organisation over $500,000 in the last three years, and most companies (83%) split spend evenly between proactive and reactive measures — a sign that resilience and trust mechanisms are still maturing.

    Data foundations still decide outcomes

    Ireland’s trust gap is anchored in data readiness. Four in ten organisations cite data issues as the top barrier to realising value from agents. Integration with legacy systems is also more acute locally than in the US.

    The Digital Trust Insights Survey aligns with this finding: Irish firms are increasing cyber risk investment (57%), but knowledge gaps and unclear risk appetite remain prominent barriers to using AI for cyber defence.

    Without high quality, well governed, securely accessible data, agent performance, trust and return on investment will stall.

    From back office to the front line

    Adoption patterns are shifting. Customer service is now the leading use case in Ireland, ahead of operations and finance. But adoption remains patchy in sales and marketing, and only a minority are using agents to redesign processes or create new products.

    That hesitancy mirrors cyber trends: while 78% of organisations expect cyber budgets to rise and 41% are adopting AI and machine learning to strengthen their cyber defence, many teams admit to skills and knowledge gaps in applying AI responsibly.

    Until governance, assurance and risk ownership are crystal clear, leaders will keep agents near the “human in the loop” perimeter and away from autonomous decisions in revenue critical journeys.

    What Irish leaders can do now

    Build transparent guardrails: Treat trust as a design requirement, not an afterthought. Define “high stakes” thresholds (such as financial postings, contractual commitments or regulated customer interactions, for example) and require explainability, human validation and auditable logs for those flows. The Digital Trust Insights Survey data shows boards are backing cyber and data risk investment; use that momentum to embed Responsible AI policies and model risk controls alongside your existing cyber frameworks.

    Fix data at the source: Prioritise the datasets that feed your first scaled agents and apply basic hygiene: lineage, quality rules, access controls and retention. Integrate with legacy systems via standardised APIs to limit brittle point-to-point builds. Our AI Agent Survey indicates that data issues and integration are the biggest Irish barriers; solving them will lift both performance and confidence.

    Make cyber and AI one conversation: Security leaders are already prioritising AI capabilities; align this with your agent roadmap so threat detection, data loss prevention and identity controls are tuned to agent behaviours (for example, elevated scope service accounts or automated actions). Given that only a small fraction of organisations report full capability across data risk measures, closing this gap raises assurance and accelerates adoption.

    Upskill for oversight, not just usage: The surveys point to knowledge and skills gaps as top obstacles. Train for oversight, not just usage. Governance, failure modes, red-teaming and incident playbooks matter as much as daily operations. This supports safe autonomy where it matters and reduces reliance on ad hoc controls.

    Measure enterprise value, not task wins: Link agent outcomes to cost to serve, cycle time and revenue metrics, not just task time saved. With only 38% reporting cost savings despite widespread productivity gains, shifting measurement will force process redesign and accountability at the business unit level. Start with two or three journeys where you control both the data and the decision rights.

    The destination is trusted autonomy

    Irish leaders agree: AI agents will reshape work. But without trusted autonomy built on secure data and transparent governance, the promise will stall.

    Start earning trust now, and enterprise-scale value will follow.   

    This article was first published on www.businesspost.ie

     

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  • Three-quarters of global population is deficient in omega-3, signaling public health gap

    Three-quarters of global population is deficient in omega-3, signaling public health gap

    Scientists are calling to increase omega-3 intake as their research concludes that 76% of the global population is not consuming the recommended levels. The study has identified available recommendations and gaps worldwide.

    The difference between…

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  • First Look At Keke Palmer-Starring Peacock Series

    First Look At Keke Palmer-Starring Peacock Series

    Peacock has released the trailer for its new mystery comedy series, The ‘Burbs, starring Keke Palmer and Jack Whitehall.

    The eight-episode series, an adaptation of the 1989 film starring Tom Hanks and Carrie Fisher, is set to premiere all…

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  • PureHealth Research’s Youth Switch longevity supplement targets telomere shortening for healthy aging

    PureHealth Research’s Youth Switch longevity supplement targets telomere shortening for healthy aging

    PureHealth Research has launched its Youth Switch longevity supplement, addressing a fundamental aging marker — telomere shortening — with a specialized blend of adaptogens and antioxidants that have been studied for their effects on…

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  • Long-term beneficial effects of dog assisted therapy on depressive sym

    Long-term beneficial effects of dog assisted therapy on depressive sym

    Introduction

    Symptoms seen in depression, such as lack of social contact and engagement, sleeping disturbance, reduced appetite, and diminished zest for life, often resemble the symptoms seen in ASD. It has been known for some time that…

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  • UK Championship: Zhang Anda stuns world champion Zhao Xintong to win all-Chinese contest

    UK Championship: Zhang Anda stuns world champion Zhao Xintong to win all-Chinese contest

    Zhang Anda produced a superb potting display to defeat world champion Zhao Xintong 6-2 as he advanced to the last eight at the UK Championship in York.

    Having lost the opening frame of the all-Chinese affair, Zhang hit back-to-back centuries as…

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  • Henry Pollock: Jamie George on England’s ‘brilliant idiot’

    Henry Pollock: Jamie George on England’s ‘brilliant idiot’

    Jamie George says England team-mate Henry Pollock is a personality without precedent in rugby, adding the 20-year-old back row is a “genuinely fascinating” character.

    Pollock enjoyed a breakthrough campaign last season, which began on the bench…

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  • FIA and Member Clubs Advance Urban Mobility and Road Safety at Tomorrow.Mobility World Congress

    FIA and Member Clubs Advance Urban Mobility and Road Safety at Tomorrow.Mobility World Congress

    FIA and Member Clubs Advance Urban Mobility and Road Safety at Tomorrow.Mobility World Congress

    At Tomorrow.Mobility World Congress in Barcelona, the FIA delegation gathering representatives…

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  • iOS 26 update makes motion sickness feature more powerful

    iOS 26 update makes motion sickness feature more powerful

    Apple’s recent iOS 26 overhaul included a plethora of major additions and complete system makeovers, but there were even more tweaks, settings, and customization settings that flew…

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