Connect with us

Tech

Kaspersky Next updates its all-in-one Security Operations Center (SOC) management console and enhances Artificial Intelligence (AI) functionality

Published

on

Kaspersky

This update provides optimised sizing, reducing resource requirements by up to 30% for users of Kaspersky Next EDR Expert and up to 60% for users of Kaspersky Next XDR Expert

These advancements facilitate the administration and maintenance of security tasks on a platform, and allow for advanced AI capabilities, enhancing various processes from faster data search to improved threat detection. Moreover, this update in Kaspersky Next (www.Kaspersky.co.za) helps companies significantly reduce hardware requirements, leading to cost savings and increased efficiency.

According to the latest Kaspersky global study, one in three companies intends (https://apo-opa.co/3NrZEE7) to integrate EDR (Endpoint Detection and Response) or XDR (Extended Detection and Response) into their security operations centers to deliver advanced and reliable protection. This trend highlights a growing recognition among organisations of the critical importance of unified, proactive security solutions to counter increasingly sophisticated cyber threats. With this in mind, Kaspersky updated Kaspersky Next to ensure that businesses are armed with the most effective and all-encompassing cybersecurity technologies and tools.

 

Kaspersky Next is a flagship B2B product line that provides real-time protection, threat visibility, investigation and response capabilities of EDR and XDR within core offerings: Kaspersky Next Optimum (for small and mid-sized businesses) and Kaspersky Next Expert (for enterprises of all sizes). In its new release, Kaspersky Next Expert has received significant updates related to AI-powered technologies, EDR capabilities and flexible deployment options.

 

All in one: more integrity and visibility in Kaspersky Next EDR Expert

 

Kaspersky Next EDR Expert has migrated to the Open Single Management Platform (OSMP), uniting essential security operations center (SOC) tools such as EPP, EDR, XDR and SIEM within a single management console. This migration enables seamless interaction between components and allows both Kaspersky and third-party solutions to be integrated with the console. At the same time, Kaspersky maintained seamless transitions between OSMP and Kaspersky Anti Targeted Attack/Network Detection and Response interfaces with the Single Sign-On service to ensure a simple and fast experience with both EDR and NDR simultaneously.

 

For large-scale deployments, this update provides optimised sizing, reducing resource requirements by up to 30% for users of Kaspersky Next EDR Expert and up to 60% for users of Kaspersky Next XDR Expert.

 

With the new release, companies receive access to advanced AI features including:

 

By unifying SOC tools within a single platform and enhancing EDR and AI capabilities, we enable faster, more precise threat detection, as well as more efficient operations

Precise detection of DLL hijacking class attacks, with automatic alert generation upon identification. DLL hijacking is a prominent attack technique that involves getting vulnerable legitimate software to load a malicious dynamic library (DLL). AI examines program launch and execution parameters, identifying suspicious occurrences of legitimate software running with malicious libraries, enabling the solution to detect DLL hijacking.

 

Spotting of potentially compromised user accounts. The AI-driven mechanism leverages new correlation rules that determine the baseline of normal login activity and detects abnormal events to trigger account theft alerts.

 

In addition to the above-mentioned AI-based features, Kaspersky Investigation and Response Assistant (KIRA AI) has also been integrated into Kaspersky Next. KIRA is the first GenAI-powered assistant in the product line, designed to empower SOC analysts by deobfuscating command lines, providing detailed analyses and generating concise reports to help reduce cognitive load. Among other things, KIRA provides the following capabilities:

  • Intelligent formulation of Threat Hunting queries in plain text. The system automatically translates a natural request into a structured query compatible with the telemetry database. Analysts can review the generated query, validate its logic and adjust parameters or syntax if required.
  • Rapid generation of incident summaries in text form. Within the incident card, an AI-generated summary is displayed, explaining what happened during the incident, including the initial attack vector and the attacker’s actions throughout the incident. This enables analysts to quickly grasp the key details without reviewing all underlying event data.

 

Enhanced EDR capabilities

 

Kaspersky Next Expert now also provides improved EDR functionalities and delivers a new level of security and operational efficiency:

  • The improved integration with Kaspersky MDR enables seamless collaboration, allowing for faster and more coordinated threat response.
  • Enhanced monitoring of the “health” metrics for the product’s server components ensures optimal performance and reliability, minimising downtime and maintaining stability.
  • The advanced capabilities of the Linux EDR agent help organisations detect and mitigate threats more effectively across diverse environments.
  • Playbooks have been added to enable automated or manual incident response, reducing the time from threat detection to its neutralisation.
  • The ability for alert merging into incidents was added, allowing analysts to focus on the full attack picture, reduce information noise and prioritise response to the most critical threats.
  • An attack development graph is now available. It provides a visual overview of the attack chain, helping analysts quickly assess the scale, vectors, stages and response points of the threat.
  • The ability to perform a response on protected devices via a remote terminal ‘Live Shell’ has been added. It significantly reduces response time and allows viewing response results in the remote terminal console in real-time mode.
  • The upgraded role-based access control (RBAC) delivers advanced capabilities for managing accounts such as creating, editing and deleting as well as flexible role management, including modifications and the assignment of multiple roles.

 

“This update exemplifies our commitment to empowering cybersecurity teams with smarter, more integrated solutions. By unifying SOC tools within a single platform and enhancing EDR and AI capabilities, we enable faster, more precise threat detection, as well as more efficient operations, raising the bar for proactive cybersecurity protection,” comments Ilya Markelov, Head of Unified Platforms at Kaspersky.

 

For more information about Kaspersky Next, please visit the website (https://apo-opa.co/3NoDG4U).

 


*To access Kaspersky Investigation and Response Assistant feature, the customer needs an additional license and an integration with an LLM provider.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Kaspersky.

Energy

Dietsmann Brings its Energy Maintenance and Robotics Expertise to African Energy Week (AEW) 2026

Published

on

After decades keeping Africa’s oil, gas and power plants running, Dietsmann is bringing robotics and AI to the center of its work

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, June 12, 2026/APO Group/ –Dietsmann, the independent specialist in operation and maintenance (O&M) services for energy production facilities, will participate as a Bronze Sponsor at African Energy Week (AEW) 2026 – taking place from October 12-16 in Cape Town. The sponsorship deepens a presence in African energy that stretches back decades and reflects the company’s growing role in the policy conversation after it joined the African Energy Chamber (https://EnergyChamber.org) earlier this year.

 

Dietsmann’s participation at AEW 2026 reflects the growing role of specialist maintenance contractors in Africa’s energy industry. With much of the continent’s production now coming from mature fields, the contractors that keep those facilities running reliably and at lower cost have become more important than ever. Dietsmann has built its position over more than four decades, maintaining oil, gas and power plants across Angola, Nigeria, Gabon, Libya, Uganda and South Sudan, often in demanding offshore and remote environments.

The company’s expertise is also on display in the Republic of Congo, where industrial maintenance is its core business. There it maintains TotalEnergies’ offshore production facilities and services the 484 MW gas-fired Centrale Électrique du Congo, one of the country’s main power plants. In Angola, it has operated since 2000 through Sonadiets, a joint venture with Sonangol that was among the first of its kind between an African national oil company and a maintenance specialist.

Dietsmann knows that reliable operations are the foundation of energy security

Dietsmann also prioritizes workforce development in parallel to its technical work. The firm has organized local training programs in all its African host countries since the early 2000s, building maintenance skills among national employees through dedicated training centers and on-the-job campaigns. Its approach aligns closely with the local-content priorities that are defining this moment in African energy policy.

Maintenance itself is being reshaped by technology, and Dietsmann is among the contractors leading the shift across Africa. In partnership with the robotics firm Taurob, the company has deployed autonomous inspection robots, including ATEX-certified units built for hazardous environments, and is integrating drones and AI-based analytics to move maintenance from reactive repairs toward predictive monitoring.

The company’s CEO Cesare Canevese has carried a consistent message into African energy circles: reliable maintenance, digitalization and local skills are non-negotiables for continental energy security. He also notes that Dietsmann’s expertise travels across the energy transition, as the fundamentals of maintaining a facility change little whether it produces oil, gas or power – readying the company for work on Africa’s growing gas-to-power and LNG projects.

“Dietsmann knows that reliable operations are the foundation of energy security,” said NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber. “Pairing decades of field experience with new technology and local skills development is how Africa keeps its existing assets producing for longer.”

As a Bronze Sponsor at AEW 2026, Dietsmann is expected to feature in discussions on operational reliability, local content and the digital technologies reshaping how Africa maintains its energy infrastructure.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

Continue Reading

Business

African Organisations Move from Awareness to Action as IT Asset Visibility Becomes a Board-Level Priority

Published

on

Following widespread recognition of the IT asset visibility gap across the continent, V-Track reports a significant shift in organisational behaviour as finance and IT leaders move beyond acknowledgement toward structured, technology-driven control

Across African markets, a shift is underway in how organisations approach IT asset management. Having acknowledged the scale of the visibility gap – the growing disconnect between what appears on balance sheets and what can be verified in the real world – finance and IT teams are now moving to close it. The conversation, once dominated by problem definition, is rapidly becoming one of implementation.

 

This shift follows a period of heightened scrutiny in which organisations have begun to quantify the financial impact of poor asset visibility: avoidable procurement spend on devices that already exist in their estates, capital tied up in assets that are no longer in productive use, audit exposure from inaccurate registers, and security risk created by devices that have drifted off the network without formal decommissioning.

“We are seeing a clear change in the nature of the conversations organisations are having with us,” said Valene Nagiah, Head of Asset Tracking and Management at V-Track. “Twelve months ago, the primary question was: do we have a problem? Now, the question is: how do we fix it  and how quickly can we demonstrate a return? That is a meaningful shift, and it reflects a broader maturation in how African businesses think about IT governance.”

From static registers to continuous control

For many organisations, the first step in closing the visibility gap has been confronting the inadequacy of existing systems. Periodic manual audits and static spreadsheet-based asset registers are the default approach across much of the continent and are increasingly being recognised for what they are: point-in-time snapshots that begin losing accuracy the moment they are completed.

In environments where assets move constantly between offices, remote locations, field teams, and employees who may work across multiple sites,  a register that is accurate today may be significantly out of date within weeks. The challenge is not simply one of data quality; it is structural. Manual processes cannot keep pace with the operational reality of a distributed, mobile workforce.

“The organisations making the most progress are those that have stopped treating asset management as an audit exercise and started treating it as a continuous function,” said Nagiah. “Visibility is not something you achieve once a year. It is something you maintain every day and that requires infrastructure, not just process.”

The hybrid workforce as a forcing function

The permanent entrenchment of hybrid and distributed working across African markets has proven to be a significant forcing function for ITAM investment. As organisations formalised remote and flexible work arrangements, the practical consequences of asset invisibility became harder to ignore. Devices issued to home-based employees, contractors, and field staff could no longer be assumed to be present, functional, or secure, and without tracking infrastructure, verifying their status required manual intervention that was neither scalable nor reliable.

The organisations making the most progress are those that have stopped treating asset management as an audit exercise and started treating it as a continuous function

In markets characterised by infrastructure variability, including intermittent power supply, inconsistent connectivity, and high rates of staff movement between employers, these challenges are amplified. A device that was verified last quarter may have changed location, changed hands, or gone offline entirely in the intervening period. Without continuous monitoring, the organisation simply does not know.

For leased IT environments, this dynamic carries additional financial weight. Devices that cannot be accounted for at the end of a lease agreement represent a direct liability, replacement costs that fall to the organisation, compounded by the administrative burden of attempting to recover assets after the fact. Proactive tracking eliminates this exposure before it materialises.

What effective implementation looks like

Organisations that have made meaningful progress on IT asset visibility share a common set of characteristics. They have moved away from treating ITAM as a back-office IT function and repositioned it as a financial control mechanism with direct implications for procurement strategy, capital allocation, and audit readiness. They have invested in platforms that provide continuous, real-time data rather than periodic snapshots. And they have created clear ownership of asset data at both the IT and finance level, recognising that the two functions need to operate from the same source of truth.

The practical benefits of this approach are demonstrable across four areas:

  • Financial accuracy: asset registers that reflect operational reality, enabling more precise depreciation, budgeting, and capital planning.
  • Procurement efficiency: elimination of duplicate or unnecessary purchases driven by inaccurate inventory data.
  • Security and compliance: continuous visibility into device status reduces the attack surface created by unmonitored endpoints and strengthens regulatory compliance.
  • Lease and lifecycle management: accurate, real-time asset data enables organisations to optimise lease terms, plan timely returns, and maximise residual value.

 

“The organisations that are getting this right are not necessarily those with the largest IT budgets,” Nagiah noted. “They are the ones that have made a deliberate decision to treat their asset estate as a managed financial resource and have put the systems in place to support that decision. The technology to do this exists, and it is accessible. The gap is no longer a technology gap. It is a decision gap.”

A platform built for African operating conditions

V-Track’s asset intelligence platform is designed to function effectively within the operational constraints that characterise many African business environments. The platform requires no on-premises infrastructure, operates across distributed and multi-jurisdiction environments, and provides finance and IT teams with a unified view of their asset estate regardless of where those assets are physically located.

Organisations yet to begin their asset visibility journey are encouraged to start with V-Track’s 15-day free trial (https://apo-opa.co/4ehmGXN) – a structured visibility audit that typically surfaces actionable findings within the first week. No procurement process, no long-form commitment, and no prior ITAM infrastructure required.

“The most common thing we hear after the trial is: we had no idea,” said Nagiah. “That is exactly the point. The trial does not sell a product – it reveals a reality. What organisations choose to do with that clarity is their decision. But they can no longer say they did not know.”

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of V-Track.

 

Continue Reading

Business

Nigeria’s Population Boom is Changing the Data Center Investment Story

Published

on

Investors backing Nigeria’s fast-growing data center sector are betting not just on today’s demand, but on the emergence of one of the world’s largest digital economies over the next three decades

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, June 3, 2026/APO Group/ –Nigeria’s data center expansion is increasingly being framed as a technology story. But at its core, it is a demographics story. Africa’s largest economy is already home to more than 240 million people, and U.N. projections indicate the country could surpass 400 million by 2050, making it the world’s third most populous nation after India and China.

 

What makes that trajectory especially significant for investors is not just population size, but the age and digital profile of that population. Nigeria remains one of the youngest countries globally, with a median age of around 18, while internet penetration has surpassed 50%, creating a rapidly expanding base of mobile-first consumers entering the digital economy each year.

 

This dynamic is fundamentally reshaping the long-term case for digital infrastructure investment. Investors are positioning for what Nigeria could become over the next two decades: one of the world’s largest digital populations, with rising demand for cloud computing, AI-enabled services, fintech platforms, streaming content, enterprise software and sovereign data storage.

This shift is already shaping how the industry is thinking about digital infrastructure across the continent. At African Energy Week 2026 – the continent’s premier energy event – the introduction of an AI and Data Center track – Renegade Intel – reflects growing recognition that data infrastructure is becoming as critical as energy infrastructure to Africa’s economic future. In markets like Nigeria, where population growth is rapidly translating into digital demand, that intersection is now central to long-term investment planning.

Nigeria’s data center market, valued at roughly $288 million in 2025, is projected to surpass $1 billion by 2031, with operators rapidly expanding colocation and cloud capacity in Lagos and other urban hubs. Major players including Equinix, MTN, Rack Center and Open Access Data Centers are scaling infrastructure to capture what they see as long-term structural growth rather than a short-term market cycle.

In 2025, MTN announced a more than $240 million investment into a new Lagos data facility designed to support AI and cloud demand, underscoring how operators are preparing for far larger digital workloads in the years ahead. Recent reports suggest nearly $1 billion in broader data center investments flowing into Nigeria as companies race to expand cloud and AI infrastructure capacity.

 

Data centers are becoming critical infrastructure for Africa’s economic future, but none of this growth happens without energy

Much of that optimism rests on the belief that Nigeria’s digital consumption curve is still in its early stages. Fintech adoption continues to accelerate across the country, streaming platforms are expanding local content distribution, and enterprise cloud migration remains relatively underpenetrated compared to more mature markets. At the same time, artificial intelligence is expected to dramatically increase computing and storage requirements globally, creating additional incentives to localize infrastructure closer to end users.

 

For Nigeria, data localization and sovereign storage are becoming increasingly strategic as governments and businesses seek greater control over where critical information is processed and stored. Building data centers locally is now seen as essential for data control, security and long-term economic growth.

 

Still, the opportunity comes with its challenges. Reliable electricity supply remains one of the biggest constraints on large-scale data center expansion in Nigeria, where operators often rely heavily on backup generation and hybrid power systems. Connectivity improvements, regulatory clarity and long-term energy availability will all play a critical role in determining how quickly infrastructure deployment can scale.

 

“Data centers are becoming critical infrastructure for Africa’s economic future, but none of this growth happens without energy,” says NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber. “Countries like Nigeria are seeing rising demand because of demographics, connectivity and digital adoption, but investors also need confidence that long-term power supply can support that expansion.”

 

Nigeria’s population growth alone does not guarantee digital infrastructure success. But when combined with rising internet penetration, fintech adoption, cloud usage and AI-driven computing demand, it creates a scale opportunity few emerging markets can match. Investors are looking beyond today’s market to the scale Nigeria’s digital economy could reach.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Energy Chamber.

Continue Reading

Trending

Exit mobile version