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TUANZ Tech Users Summit

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Source: New Zealand Government

Opening Remarks

Ngā mihi te rangi, ngā mihi te whenua, ngā mihi ki a koutou. Tēna koutou, tēna koutou, tēna koutou katoa.

Thank you, Craig, TUANZ, and the Digital Health Association, for the welcome and your hard work in organising today’s summit.

To the summit theme, “Digital as Core Infrastructure” – as the Minister for Science Innovation and Technology this is an important theme for how it supports science endeavours, and as a part of a Government prioritising infrastructure development and delivery. I will expand later on how the science reforms support this. 

Digital Infrastructure

The Connecting Aotearoa report highlights that connectivity is crucial for driving innovation, collaboration, and tech growth.

Our geography is vast, our communities diverse, and our exposure to natural disasters and global disruptions is real. We benefit from digital infrastructure that is fast and resilient. Digital connectedness is also an international motive for economic and social progress.

Major shifts in digital infrastructure have transformed how we live and work. Digital infrastructure secures our data, drives global trade, connects us, and help Kiwi businesses compete internationally. 

Digital infrastructure is rapidly evolving globally and we want New Zealand to be a participant – not just a bystander. Much of this innovation comes from the private sector and a strong science, innovation and technology system is required to support that. 

Science, innovation, and technology system reform

That’s why we are committed to bold, once-in 30 year reforms of our science, innovation and technology system. Reform that delivers real-world impact, drives economic growth, and maximises the $1.2 billion in annual government funding – $0.3 billion for Centres of Research Excellence and $0.3 billion for the Tertiary Research Excellence Fund.

The reforms are looking to reduce red tape, simplify funding and reporting lines, better align research with other successful small advanced economies, and drive better economic returns and economic growth.

To achieve this, we’ve transformed seven Crown Research Institutes into three Public Research Organisations (PROs) and establishing a fourth. These PROs are:

the Bioeconomy Science Institute, (Agresearch, Landcare, Scion, Plant & Food),
the Earth Sciences New Zealand (GNS, NIWA, Metservice),
the New Zealand Institute for Public Health and Forensic Science (ESR),
and the recently announced New Zealand Institute for Advanced Technology.

These changes are already improving coordination, driving efficiency, and ensuring that the system is able to respond dynamically to a complex, digital world. 

The Chief Executive of Lincoln based Bioeconomy institute describes the pleasure the scientists previously at Agresearch, now have, in walking across the road to Landcare, without needing a non-disclosure agreement. All of the three PROs are dependent on fast and efficient digital infrastructure, but this requirement is particularly so for the new PRO. 
The fourth new PRO, The New Zealand Institute for Advanced Technology (NZIAT), is a key part of our plan to grow a high-tech, high-value economy and the Government is investing $231 million over four years into this PRO:

back science and tech that can shape New Zealand’s future industries
build skills and grow talent in emerging technologies, and
drive economic growth by turning innovation into real-world products and businesses. 

Emerging technologies are dispersed through the science system, but the Advanced Technology PRO will provide a specific focus, as is done in other small advanced economies.

The New Zealand Institute for Advanced Technology will be headquartered in Auckland as a hub and spoke model. The first spoke I have announced is with Robinson Research Institute, with $70 million over 7 years supporting cryogenic superconducting, materials and magnet physics. 

Two lesser-known digital investments are:

The Governments investment in data connectivity through the Research Education Advanced Network New Zealand (REANNZ), which operates a specialist digital network for New Zealand’s research and education sector. Since July, REANNZ has also been providing specialised High Performance Compute resources and analytics to researchers working on large-scale, highly complex projects.

The other is the new $20m supercomputer which I recently activated, and is run previously by NIWA, but now by the PRO Earth Sciences New Zealand. This is the largest research computer in New Zealand, one of the most powerful in the Southern Hemisphere, and represents a significant investment in our world-leading climate, marine and freshwater science. The new computer has 2-3 times more processing power than its predecessor, allowing for higher resolution, more frequent processing and additional AI workloads.

Supporting digital infrastructure requires investment and global talent. This is why we’re also:

Bedding in the Prime Minister’s new Science, Innovation and Technology Advisory Council, which I am proud to chair, to set national priorities and guide our science investments,
Developing a national intellectual property policy to support commercial returns from research,
Reforming the RMA system to unlock economic growth and reduce red tape,
Changing the Overseas Investment Act to attract high net worth investors by deepening their connection to our country to help grow the economy, and
We have established Invest New Zealand as a one-stop-shop for foreign direct investment. 

These changes will increase investment, simplify the regulatory environment, boost capital, and drive private sector innovation.

The AI Strategy

AI is another revolutionary technology that presents a significant opportunity for New Zealand. When I released New Zealand’s first AI Strategy, I signalled – both at home and abroad – that we are ready to harness reform opportunities and that AI will form part of our digital infrastructure. 

The AI strategy was not a business case or an investment plan but a signal of government regulatory intentions. 

Regulating AI based on hypothetical uses or harms risks overregulation can stifle innovation. We believe that regulation should enable, not inhibit. It should provide clarity and confidence – whether you’re a business leader, a researcher, or a member of the public. Our strategy is a commitment to a proportionate, risk-based, and agile approach to AI. 

We will actively leverage existing legislation, such as privacy, consumer protection, and human rights laws, to actively respond to both the risks while remaining open to the opportunities it presents all while acknowledging the importance of social licence. 

The Privacy Commissioner’s recently published the Biometric Privacy Code 2025. The Code is now law under the Privacy Act and will help ensure businesses and organisations implementing biometric technologies are doing so, in a safe and proportionate way. 

The Government will continue to respond with agility to address AI-specific risks as they’re identified. We will learn from our neighbours and from international examples because AI is a global technology that requires global solutions. This is why we are a signatory to the OECD AI Principles which underpin the AI Strategy, and to the Bletchley, Seoul and Paris declarations. 

A key component to support New Zealand’s AI ambitions is having foundational AI infrastructure in place. Encouragingly, New Zealand’s data centre sector is gaining significant momentum, driven primarily by market demand, and stakeholder and shareholder requirements for renewable energy, which gives us clear differentiation in the global data centre market.

Trust in AI

Some New Zealanders are sceptical of AI, which is why trust is central to the AI Strategy and the Responsible AI Guidance document, which offers practical support for businesses.

These documents lay the groundwork, and broader social license will come as innovative organisations demonstrate the benefits of responsible AI use.

The AI Strategy, the science, innovation and technology system reforms and investments are about getting our basic settings right for digital infrastructure, so that our innovators, our institutions, and our economy and people can thrive.

In closing, the $183 million of funding I announced in the recent Endeavour funding round demonstrates the importance I place on technology and the digital world and the Government’s support for funding these ambitions. This round included modelling super critical energy, creating space bound photonic receivers that will replace the current ozone measuring satellite that will stop next year, broad spectrum antivirals, and MedTech smart wearables. 

Many if not most of the 19 multiyear multimillion dollar projects will also use AI and all are deeply dependent on technology and digital infrastructure. 

Put simply, Science, Technology, and the digital world is currently a highlight area of intellectual endeavour and economic growth for me, and I invite you all to buckle in for what’s going to be a heck of a ride, and I look forward to traversing that ride with you. 

Nō reira, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, kia ora mai tātou. 

MIL OSI

Quick Naturing: small moves, big wins for nature

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Source: NZ Department of Conservation

Busy? Same. But here’s the good news: you don’t need hours, hiking boots, or a PhD in ecology to give nature a hand.

That’s the whole idea behind Always Be Naturing. An official public service request from us, encouraging everyone to weave small, nature-friendly actions into everyday life.

The count | DOC

And here’s the fun twist

Aotearoa New Zealand’s ‘population’ has just been updated to a whopping 695 billion*(ish). Not just people but birds, bats, fish, trees, and all other living things we share this beautiful land with.  

So, when you take a quick moment for nature, you’re not just doing it for yourself, you’re doing it for billions*ish of neighbours. That’s a lot of flatmates relying on us.

So, here’s your speedy guide to Quick Naturing, featuring zero prep, minimal effort and maximum feel-good factor.


Start your day with birdsong

Step outside with your morning cuppa (bonus: tucked in a reusable cup) and pause for a moment. Listen. Let those tūī and korimako show off their pipes.

Korimako in song | DOC.

Lose the headphones

Your playlist can wait. On your walk or bus ride, let the soundtrack of rustling leaves, chirping pīwakawaka, and maybe even a kererū take over.

It’s five minutes of therapy, courtesy of the 695 billion*

*ish.

Taking in nature’s playlist | Belle Gwilliam/DOC

Post a nature reel or snapshot

You don’t need to summit a mountain! Take a stroll to your local park, snap a cool insect, or even a raindrop on a leaf will do. Snap it, post it, and boom! You’ve just shared a little nature love with your mates.

Scrolling with purpose. Good for the billions*ish.

A very cool gum emperor moth | Josefine Stenudd/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Put a bell on your cat

Fashion meets conservation. A tiny jingle means fewer stealthy pounces on our unsuspecting native birds, bats and lizards.

Your cat still struts; wildlife stays safer. Billions*ish breathe a sigh of relief. Small action for a huge impact.

Cat with bell collar | Tom Woodward/CC BY-SA 2.0

Donate from the couch

No boots, no mud, no mozzies. Just you, your couch, and a quick click to support conservation. Even the price of a flat white helps protect our wild places.

Streaming Endangered Species Aotearoa on TVNZ+ plus nature saving equals the ultimate team up.

Donating from the comfort of your couch = quick naturing | DOC.

Take the scenic route

Swap the shortcut for the long way home through the park. Breathe in that earthy, post-rain smell. Spot the kōwhai blooming. Call it multitasking, commute + exercise + quick naturing.

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Kōwhai blooming. You may be lucky to see a tūi on your detour | © Shellie Evans

Be a scientist (yes, really)

See something cool, a moth, a mushroom/fungi, a mystery plant? Snap it and upload to iNaturalist. Experts get real data, and you get bragging rights as a citizen scientist.

Lab coat optional.

iNaturalist NZ

Support predator free conservation efforts

Join (or even just follow) a local predator-free group online. Share their posts, sign up for a predator-free trapping session, or cheer them on. Every little action counts when you’ve got billions*ish of neighbour relying on you.

Predator free trapping and volunteers | DOC.

Why quick naturing works

Here’s the secret: nature doesn’t need perfect. It just needs participation. And when 695 billion*ish of us (yep, all those trees, birds, and humans together) each do a tiny thing, whether it’s clipping a bell on a pet, posting a nature snap, or pausing to hear the dawn chorus, that adds up to big wins.

So next time you think ‘I don’t have time,’ remember: you do. Just a quick nature moment at a time.

Now go forth and quick nature. After all, it’s 695 billion*ish-to-one odds you’ll make a difference.

Make a difference for this whio family, included in the 695 billion*ish | DOC.

Keep up to date and following along with Always Be Naturing here: Always Be Naturing

Quick Nature Checklist

Quick Action Effort Level
Listen to dawn birdsong 30 seconds
Walk without headphones 5 minutes
Share a nature photo/reel
Bell on your cat 1 minute (allow up to 2 if your cat is in a playful mood)
Click ‘Donate’ from the couch
Choose the scenic commute path Minimal detour
Share iNaturalist sighting 1-2 minutes
Join a conservation group online

What are your simple but effective naturing ideas? Let us know in the comments.

MIL OSI

South Island car dealer sentenced for Clean Car Discount fraud

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Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) is welcoming the sentencing of South Island car dealer Hamish Gardyne yesterday (9 September 2025) for dishonestly claiming the Clean Car Discount (CCD) rebate.

Appearing in the Dunedin District Court, from a starting point of two years and 10 months imprisonment, he was sentenced to nine months and two weeks home detention, and 200 hours community work. To arrive at the sentence, District Court Judge D Robinson considered the seriousness of offending and the scale of the fraud. 

NZTA National Manager Road Safety Regulations Brett Aldridge says sending a very clear message to the wider industry that this type of behaviour is unacceptable is a priority for NZTA.

“This sentencing was the result of many months of meticulous work. The scale of this fraud is significant, and this sentence should send a strong warning to anyone considering fraudulent activity in the vehicle industry – NZTA will investigate and prosecute when we find breaches,” says Mr Aldridge. 

The Clean Car Discount rebate could be claimed from April 2022 to December 2023 by low emission vehicle owners. Dealers were only allowed to claim a rebate for cars they registered to themselves and used as a company car, courtesy car or demonstration vehicle for at least three months.  

Between March and April 2023, Mr Gardyne applied to get rebates on 119 Nissan Leaf vehicles, claiming they were demonstration cars. The rebate for a Nissan Leaf would be of $3450 per vehicle amounting to a total claim of $410,550. 

Concerned about the number of claims for demonstrator vehicles from Mr Gardyne’s company, HVS (Hamish Vehicle Sales Ltd), NZTA began an investigation. The investigation found that his claims were false, and that he had already sold and exported 90 of these vehicles to Australia. 

NZTA recovered the one claim paid out to Mr Gardyne, who later also withdrew his other 118 claims through his lawyer. 

MIL OSI

HKGSEO Launches New SEO+GEO Optimization Service to Help Businesses Seize Traffic Opportunities in the AI Search Era

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Source: Media Outreach

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 10 September 2025 – HKGSEO, a leading SEO company in Hong Kong, today announced the launch of its revolutionary “SEO+GEO” dual-engine optimization service. This new offering aims to help businesses adapt to the AI-driven search revolution by not only improving traditional search engine rankings but also actively implementing Generative Engine Optimization (GEO). This ensures that their content is proactively recommended and referenced by AI platforms such as ChatGPT, Gemini, and DeepSeek, allowing businesses to capture next-generation traffic opportunities.

With the increasing popularity of AI chatbots, user search behavior has undergone a fundamental shift. More and more users are no longer simply typing keywords but are instead using natural language to ask questions, expecting immediate, clear, and context-rich answers. This means that in addition to traditional SEO, businesses now need to focus on GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) to ensure that AI actively “speaks” their brand content when answering questions.

HKGSEO stated, “AI Overview has become a critical component of Google search results. Even the best SEO rankings may appear below AI-generated summaries. In the future, a business’s visibility will not only depend on keyword rankings but also on whether AI understands, trusts, and is willing to reference them.”

HKGSEO’s new SEO+GEO service leverages AI technology to provide the following key optimization strategies:

Content Structure Optimization: Deploy FAQ-style content on websites with Schema markup to make it easier for AI to understand and reference.

Authority and Trust Building: Use authoritative data, customer case studies, and industry certifications to enhance E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) signals.

Brand Reputation Development: Increase opportunities for AI referencing and recommendations through industry directories, media coverage, and multi-channel content exposure.

Technical Architecture Optimization: Ensure websites are effectively crawled and indexed by AI bots, improving multimedia recognition and loading performance.

HKGSEO added, “AI needs to learn from high-quality content to provide good answers. If businesses fail to optimize their content and technical infrastructure, they will be absent from AI’s knowledge base, missing out on the next wave of traffic opportunities.”

With HKGSEO’s new SEO+GEO optimization service, businesses can benefit from a single monthly fee that not only ensures effectiveness across Google, Google Mobile, Yahoo, and Bing SEO but also enhances visibility on major AI Q&A platforms (such as Google AI Overview and Bing Copilot Answer). This helps businesses capture traffic from both search engines and AI platforms, improving their digital marketing ROI.

Hashtag: #HKGSEO

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

Media advisory: Henderson Beat Team launch

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Source: New Zealand Police

Police are excited to invite media to the launch of the Henderson Beat Team, which began patrolling this week.

A launch event will be held in Henderson on Friday morning.

Waitematā West Area Commander Inspector Simon Walker and Minister of Police Mark Mitchell will launch the team.

Media are asked to RSVP to media@police.govt.nz. Please arrive before the start time to allow time to set up.

WHERE:
Meet at Waitākere Chambers
6 Henderson Valley Road, Henderson.
Entrance is accessed via Te Ara Pūheke or via Railside Avenue, using the rail overbridge.

WHEN
Friday 12 September from 11am-12.30pm

WHAT
The Henderson Beat Team will be launched to community guests and media.
After the launch there will be further opportunities for media with a walkalong through part of Henderson CBD, followed by a media stand up.

ENDS.

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

MIL OSI

Wellington’s Watts Peninsula reserve confirmed

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Source: New Zealand Government

public reserve will finally be established on the iconic Miramar Peninsula – Te Motu Kairangi in Wellington, Conservation Minister Tama Potaka and Land Information Minister Chris Penk have announced. 

“Watts Peninsula, also known as Mātai Moana, is a prominent landmark with enormous historical and cultural significance for many New Zealanders,” Mr Potaka says.  

“The Watts Peninsula public reserve was first promised to the people of Wellington and New Zealand by the government in 2011,” Mr Penk says.  

“I can today confirm that a reserve will be created on the northern tip of Miramar Peninsula, following the transfer of 72 hectares of land from Land Information New Zealand to the Department of Conservation – Te Papa Atawhai (DOC).  

“There is strong public interest in safeguarding the whenua (land) and I thank everyone who has advocated for this outcome. 

“The area is home to pā sites, wāhi tapu (sacred places) and military heritage sites built from the 1880s through to the Second World War, including Fort Ballance. 

“This decision will preserve a treasured part of Wellington and its rich history for future generations.” 

Mr Potaka says a charitable trust will manage the reserve, with trustees appointed by Wellington City Council, Taranaki Whānui and DOC. 

“The Trust’s role will be to protect, preserve, and promote the reserve as a place of ecological, historical, and cultural importance that all people can access and enjoy.  

“Establishing the reserve offers an opportunity to regenerate Watts Peninsula for the benefit of all New Zealanders and overseas manuhiri (visitors) while protecting our beautiful indigenous flora and fauna. 

“Ongoing funding for the operation and maintenance of the reserve will be provided by Wellington City Council, and Taranaki Whānui through the Port Nicholson Block Settlement Trust.” 

An official opening of the reserve will take place once it’s ready for public access. 

Notes to editor:

  • The land will be transferred from LINZ to DOC under the Public Works Act and will then be formalised as a recreation reserve by DOC under the Reserves Act. 
  • The reserve is the land previously used by the New Zealand Defence Force.  It does not include the neighbouring Wellington Prison/Mt Crawford site, or the community gardens based on the prison site.  

MIL OSI

Transporting New Zealand supports plans to toll the Belfast to Pegasus Motorway and Woodend Bypass (B2P)

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Source: Ia Ara Aotearoa Transporting New Zealand

National road freight association Transporting New Zealand is endorsing plans to toll the new 10km motorway from SH1 Belfast to Pegasus Motorway and the new Woodend Bypass (B2P), which is planned to open by 2030.
Transporting New Zealand Chief Executive Dom Kalasih says that tolling revenue is essential to getting B2P and other Roads of National Significance delivered.
The NZTA estimates that the route will earn $514 million in tolls over 35 years (or a positive net present value of $125m), helping cover the estimated cost of construction of between $729-$876m.
“Between this route and two other recently proposed toll roads which we supported – Otaki to North of Levin and the Takitimu North Link in Bay of Plenty – some $1.5 billion in toll revenue is estimated to be collected over 35 years. That’s money that doesn’t come from the National Land Transport Fund, and which can instead be allocated to maintaining or improving existing roads,” says Kalasih.
“Nobody enjoys stumping up for road tolls, particularly when they’re already paying fuel tax or weight-calculated Road User Charges. However, modern, grade separated roads keep motorists safer, move people and freight faster, and reduce congestion and inefficient stop-start driving.”
“B2P also has toll-free alternative routes available and projected traffic volumes well above the mandatory 10,000 daily tolling threshold.”
“The sooner we can deliver those improvements the better.”
Kalasih says the alternative to tolling is additional government borrowing, higher fuel taxes and Road User Charges, or freezing the roading pipeline. As it is, NZTA’s forecasting shows a growing transport funding deficit, reaching $6b a year by 2030.
The proposed toll road is innovative in having two toll gantries on different sections of the route, but with a proposed toll fee for each being half what a single toll across the entire route would be ($1.25 for light vehicles, and $2.50 for heavy vehicles, or a total of $2.50/$5.00 across the entire route).
“The New Zealand Transport Agency have devised this solution as a way of minimising diversion of through traffic onto local roads, while also being fairer to local traffic who may only use a portion of the route,” Kalasih says.
“This section of State Highway is a major freight route and a major connector to Christchurch city, the airport, and Lyttleton Port. Upgrading some of the highway to a 4-lane divided motorway, and adding the new Woodend Bypass will take heavy freight off local roads, reduce travel times and improve road safety for a modest toll fee,” Kalasih concludes. 

MIL OSI

Tech and Security – Ransomware Hits New Peak: Zscaler Finds Data Theft Nearly Doubles to 238TB in One Year

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Source: Zscaler

Key Findings:

  • Ransomware attacks blocked by the Zscaler cloud rose 146% globally, the sharpest spike observed in the past three years. 
  • Public extortion cases jumped by 70% based on data leak site analysis. 
  • Data exfiltration volumes increased 92%. 
  • The United States remains the top ransomware attack target, while Australia ranked among the eight most-targeted countries globally and second most in APAC region. 
  • Australia saw a 110% year-over-year increase in ransomware attacks, with the manufacturing, healthcare, and government sectors being the most heavily impacted. 

SYDNEY, Australia – 10 September 2025 – Zscaler, Inc., the leader in cloud security, today published its annual Zscaler ThreatLabz 2025 Ransomware Report. The report examines the latest trends shaping the ransomware threat landscape, revealing how attacks are adapting and escalating. It highlights the most targeted sectors and regions, profiles the most active ransomware families, analyses shifting attack methodologies, and provides actionable recommendations to help organisations strengthen their defences. ThreatLabz’s findings underscore the critical importance of organisations adopting a comprehensive Zero Trust Everywhere strategy. This approach is essential to prevent ransomware and other malicious threats from lateral movement and compromising sensitive user data, applications, and information.

“The sharp rise in ransomware attacks in Australia reinforces a critical truth that no organisation is immune and no region is off-limits,” said Heng Mok, CISO-in-Residence, Asia Pacific & Japan at Zscaler. “This escalation reflects not just a growing number of adversaries, but the increasing sophistication of their tactics, often powered by GenAI. Leveraging AI tools such as ChatGPT and other dark web variants means that threat actors, regardless of sophistication level, can create more efficient, scalable and automated attacks democratising both the effort and costs of an attack. Now is the moment for businesses and government leaders across ANZ and APAC to reassess their cyber resilience and business aligned cyber strategies. What’s required is a fundamental shift in strategy towards a modern defensible architecture, one that embraces Zero Trust as the new foundation for security.”

Data Demand Fuels Steady Attack Growth

Ransomware attacks globally are intensifying at an alarming rate, with attempted attacks blocked in the Zscaler cloud up 146% year-over-year. This escalation reflects a strategic shift: ransomware groups are increasingly prioritising data theft and extortion over data encryption, with sensitive data leaked online when victims fail to pay.  Accordingly, the report details a 92% increase in the total volume of exfiltrated data by 10 major ransomware groups in the past year, rising from 123 TB to 238 TB. This emphasis on data theft—and the threat of exposure—allows attackers to exert greater pressure on victims, amplifying the impact of ransomware on organisations globally including reputational damage, regulatory fines and an erosion of customer trust.The long-term impact goes beyond just the immediate disruption. It puts an organisation’s reputation, day-to-day operations, and overall strategy at risk. Losing customer trust can hurt a company’s standing and value, while fines from regulators add to the damage. As ransomware attacks become more advanced, businesses must work harder to protect their sensitive data and stay safe.

Industries Under Siege

In Australia, ransomware activity has surged particularly in the manufacturing, healthcare, and government sectors, closely mirroring global trends. Cybercriminals continue to focus on the high-stakes environments of the Manufacturing (1,063 attacks), Technology (922), and Healthcare (672) sectors, making them the most frequently hit by ransomware over the past year. These industries are particularly vulnerable due to the potential for operational disruption, the sensitivity of stolen data, and the associated risks of reputational damage and regulatory fallout.

The Oil & Gas sector has seen a staggering increase in ransomware attacks, spiking over 900% year-over-year. This surge is likely a result of increased automation of systems that control critical infrastructure, including drilling rigs and pipelines, expanding the sector’s attack surface, coupled with outdated security practices.

Ransomware Operators Focus on Digitally Mature, High-Value Economies

Leak site data highlights a distinct geographic disparity, with victims in the United States accounting for 50% of ransomware attacks, significantly outpacing Canada (5%) and the United Kingdom (4%). Ransomware attacks in the U.S. more than doubled to 3,671, exceeding the combined total number of attacks reported across all other countries in the top 15 most-targeted countries.

Leak site data found that Australia also saw one of the highest year-over-year increase in ransomware incidents, ranking as the 8th most impacted country globally and 2nd in the APAC region rising 110% from 73 to 153 attacks. This surge reflects how threat actors are expanding their focus beyond traditional hotspots to include countries like Australia, where digital transformation, critical infrastructure, and healthcare vulnerabilities are rising in parallel.

Ransomware Groups Driving the Surge

Several highly active groups continued to dominate the ransomware ecosystem, with RansomHub leading the pack, claiming the highest number of publicly named victims globally at 833. Akira and Clop have both moved up in the ransomware attack rankings since last year. Akira, associated with 520 victims, has steadily expanded its reach through numerous affiliates and initial access brokers. Clop, known for its focus on supply chain attacks, is close behind with 488 victims, employing an effective strategy of exploiting vulnerabilities in commonly used third-party software.

Zscaler ThreatLabz identified 34 newly active ransomware families over the past year, bringing the total number tracked to 425 since their research began, and has a public GitHub repository that now hosts 1,018 ransomware notes, with 73 added in the last year.

How Zscaler Stops Ransomware with Zero Trust + AI

Ransomware flourishes in environments with fragmented security, limited visibility, implicit trust, and outdated legacy architectures that amplify risk rather than reduce it. The Zscaler Zero Trust Exchange mitigates these risks by replacing traditional, network-centric models with a cloud-native, AI-driven zero trust architecture, and stops ransomware at every stage of the attack life cycle by:

  • Minimising the attack surface 
  • Preventing initial compromise 
  • Eliminating lateral movement 
  • Blocking data exfiltration 

Additional AI-powered ransomware protections from Zscaler include:  

  • Breach prediction 
  • Phishing and C2 detection 
  • Inline sandboxing 
  • Zero Trust Browser 
  • Segmentation 
  • Dynamic, risk-based policy 
  • Data discovery and classification 
  • Data loss prevention (DLP) controls 

Download the Report 

Get the full ThreatLabz 2025 Ransomware Report to explore how Zscaler ThreatLabz plays an active role in protecting enterprises worldwide. Download today. 

Research Methodology 

The research methodology for this report is a comprehensive process that uses multiple data sources to identify and track ransomware trends. The ThreatLabz team collected data between April 2024 and April 2025 from sources including the Zscaler global security cloud, and the team’s own analysis of ransomware samples and attack data. 

About ThreatLabz 

ThreatLabz is the security research arm of Zscaler. This world-class team is responsible for hunting new threats and ensuring that the thousands of organisations using the global Zscaler platform are always protected. In addition to malware research and behavioural analysis, team  

members are involved in the research and development of new prototype modules for advanced threat protection on the Zscaler platform and regularly conduct internal security audits to ensure that Zscaler products and infrastructure meet security compliance standards. ThreatLabz regularly publishes in-depth analyses of new and emerging threats on its portal, research.zscaler.com

About Zscaler 

Zscaler accelerates digital transformation so customers can be more agile, efficient, resilient, and secure. The Zscaler Zero Trust Exchange™ platform protects thousands of customers from cyberattacks and data loss by securely connecting users, devices, and applications in any location. Distributed across more than 150 data centers globally, the SASE-based Zero Trust Exchange™ is the world’s largest in-line cloud security platform. 

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Environment – “Will they protect freshwater?” – Greenpeace reveals Environment Canterbury candidate scorecard

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Source: Greenpeace

‘Will they or won’t they commit to freshwater protections?’ That’s the question Greenpeace has asked of candidates standing for Environment Canterbury (ECan) regional council.
This is all laid out in Greenpeace’s freshwater scorecard released today, revealing which candidates standing in the ECan elections understand the seriousness of freshwater pollution, and are committed to taking action.
Canterbury-based Greenpeace spokesperson Will Appelbe says “Over the next few days, Cantabrians will be receiving their voting papers in the mail. We’ve asked candidates if they will stand up to protect freshwater, and we want to empower voters with this knowledge.
“Freshwater is at breaking point, and nowhere is that more obvious than in Canterbury,” says Appelbe.
“While Environment Canterbury allows the intensive dairy industry to expand unchecked, rivers are becoming too polluted to swim in and many families can’t even drink the water coming out of their kitchen tap without fear of getting sick.
“This pollution will get worse unless it’s stopped at the source – the intensive dairy industry.”
In August, it was revealed that Environment Canterbury had green-lit the addition of more than 16,000 new dairy cattle on the Canterbury plains – something Appelbe says is simply not acceptable.
“New Zealand is at the knife-edge of corporate greed,” says Appelbe. “The intensive dairy industry is destroying lakes, rivers, and drinking water to make as much money as they can, and everyone else bears the cost with polluted drinking water and inflated dairy prices.”
“That’s why we’re calling on all Environment Canterbury candidates to commit to ending dairy expansion in the region and phasing out the use of synthetic nitrogen fertiliser – because everybody, no matter where they live, has the right to clean safe drinking water.”

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Local News – Porirua events to celebrate Te Wiki o Te Reo Māori

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Source: Porirua City Council

Te Wiki o Te Reo Māori (Māori Language Week) is nearly here and this year there will be plenty of events on in Porirua to mark a special birthday.
The week, which runs this year from 14-20 September, is an annual celebration for all New Zealanders to show their support for Te Reo Māori, an official language of Aotearoa New Zealand.
This year’s Te Wiki o Te Reo Māori is the 50 th time it has been celebrated, growing from a single Māori Language Day in 1972 to a fully fledged week three years later. Its growth and gains are what we recognise 50 years on.
Porirua’s General Manager Community & Partnerships, Reuben Friend, says a week of events is a time to embrace, honour and spread te reo in our community.
 E whaiwhai ake te kaunihera o Porirua i te kaupapa mō tēnei tau, arā ko te huritau 50 e whakanuia ana i tō tātou reo Māori, hei reo mō ake ake ake. | Porirua City Council supports this year’s theme of 50 years of celebrating Māori Language Week, and of Māori being a forever language.
“It is already well-integrated into our society and phrases and expressions have become the norm for many of us, but it is important that this becomes even more ingrained,” he says.
“It’s 38 years since te reo Māori became an official language in Aotearoa, so it’s up to everyone to be kaitiaki of the language and make it stronger than ever.
“Te Reo Māori is undeniably a forever language.”

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