Major Global Tech Firms Form Trusted Tech Alliance to Set Cross‑Border Standards
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Canada and Germany launch Sovereign Technology Alliance to bolster AI resilience
At the Munich Security Conference Canada and Germany signed a joint declaration creating the Sovereign Technology Alliance to coordinate secure compute, speed commercialization, and strengthen talent pipelines. The bilateral pact complements Germany’s domestic proposal for a national AI centre and broader industry-led efforts such as the Trusted Tech Alliance, situating the Alliance within a wider move by democracies and vendors toward operational tech sovereignty and interoperable standards.

Google Leads Tech Accord to Counter Online Scams
A coalition led by Google and major tech and retail firms unveiled a coordinated pact to reduce online scams through shared signals, product controls, and public education. The agreement emphasizes cross-platform intelligence sharing, payment-authentication hardening, and asks governments to prioritize and fund anti-scam programs.
U.S. CIOs and CISOs Tighten Standards for Trustworthy AI — What Vendors Need to Prove
Enterprise technology leaders are moving from vendor assurances to continuous, evidence-based proof of safe AI — procurement now demands provenance, cryptographic attestations, pre-deployment verification and contractual backstops. Fragmented state and federal rules, plus litigation and vendor‑lock risks, are pushing buyers to require audit rights, portability clauses, secure‑by‑default agent frameworks and formal rollback plans.

Global Coalition on Telecommunications Expands with Canada, Finland, Sweden
At Mobile World Congress, the Global Coalition on Telecommunications added Finland and Sweden while Canada reaffirmed leadership, and industry partners publicly endorsed a new set of 6G security guidelines. This move accelerates allied coordination on secure-by-design networks, supply-chain diversification, and quantum-safe cryptography—forcing near-term procurement and standards consequences for vendors and operators.
Global Risk Institute: Canadian finance told to harden AI governance
GRI-led forum urged Canadian financial institutions to elevate AI governance, shore up operational resilience, and invest in workforce readiness. The report centers on an AGILE Framework and signals coordinated regulator-industry action on AI-driven cyber, third-party and stability risks — a push reinforced by international assessments documenting operational security failures and growing infrastructure concentration.

Australia Rebukes Major Tech Firms Over Failures to Curb Child Sexual Abuse Material
Australia’s government publicly condemned large technology platforms for failing to stop the spread of child sexual abuse content, pressing for faster detection, clearer reporting and stronger enforcement. Officials signalled tougher oversight and potential regulatory steps that would force platforms to change moderation practices and cooperation with law enforcement.

U.S. Treasury to publish AI cyber-risk guidance for financial firms
The U.S. Treasury will roll out a set of six practical resources this February, created by a public-private oversight group to help financial firms manage cyber and AI risk. The materials aim to set baseline practices across governance, data stewardship, transparency and fraud controls to support safer AI adoption in banking and related services.

Alliance of Canadian Defence Companies (ACDC) launches to unify Canadian defence suppliers
A new industry-led trade body, the Alliance of Canadian Defence Companies (ACDC), has launched with 23 founding members to aggregate Canadian-owned defence manufacturers, systems houses and technology vendors into a single advocacy and coalition-building platform. The group positions itself to accelerate coalition bids, coordinate supplier readiness and press for procurement-reform inputs that align with Ottawa's broader Defence Industrial Strategy (including signals such as a roughly C$500 billion investment envelope and stronger domestic-content ambitions).