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TRACK24 UNVEILS ATLASNXT TO REDEFINE GLOBAL DUTY‑OF‑CARE AND RISK INTELLIGENCE

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Exclusive interview with Andrew McInerney (CEO) and  Ebad Abid (Head of Product), Track24

Can you introduce your company to us? What does AtlasNXT do?

AtlasNXT, from TRACK24, is a duty-of-care location services and communication system. So, it enables a business to know where its people are and relate those people to the risks and other information they might face and then enables them to make decisions and communicate about to ensure the duty-of-care of their teams.

So, what inspired the founding of AtlasNXT and how does its mission differ from other duty-of-care and operational communication platforms?

TRACK24 was formed in 2004 as a location services company in high-risk environments, principally using satellite locations and satellite communication devices. And that remains one of our key differentiators, the ability to integrate satellite communications and satellite devices from any of the competitors. Since then, the world and the technology has moved on.

And in the last five years, we at TRACK24 have integrated lots of different, divergent bits of our software into AtlasNXT as a single software offering. And that provides those location services, not just to high-risk environments, but to GSM-capable and GPS-capable devices across any environment. So, where risk moves across place and time, then any business can use this, not just those ones in high risks as well.

So, it helps with travel risk management, it helps with precision communications to people, it reduces the amount of noise compared to the amount of signal that individuals get. So, precision information to the right people at the right time.

In your view, what is the biggest misconception organizations still have about modern duty-of-care technology?

We’ve come from a high-risk environment, from the most high-risk, and bring with us that sort of ethos of protection. Many organizations have come from a travel risk management environment, and therefore that tends to be diary predictions of where your diary says you’re going to be traveling that day, rather than precision location. And so, a lot of people bring with them the expectation that they get a generic travel risk management update, rather than something precise for their own movements, which changes as their own movements change.

So, the adaptability of a live tracking system enables that. The other key differentiator is the ability to maintain privacy. I’ve done that quick demonstration of the system.

So, the individual knows when they’re able to be seen by their operation, by their operators, by their employer, and when they’re not, so they can maintain their privacy. And they only lose their privacy through consent. They press a button on the app and say, track me, or check me, overwatch me, or I’m in a panic mode, or by event, and they go inside a geofence, which their employer has put up on the map.

It might be their location, it might be a risk environment, and even then, the app tells the individual that you’re now visible to your operator. So, I think it’s key, the privacy element, and the live tracking, rather than any predictive element. Coming to the privacy part, AtlasNXT emphasizes privacy-first location-based communications.

How do you balance delivering critical information with user privacy concerns?

One of the challenges is, as you have said, is if you give the user the control, you won’t be able to actually support the user, because they’ll just switch it off. So, what we do is, we allow the system to share information, but we manage privacy through the visibility of the data that’s transferred, as opposed to switching it on and off, as most people do.

Because once you switch it off, the person’s MIA, and you can’t do anything to support them. They’re not going to get any notifications; we’re not going to know where they are. But if the system is always sharing, if their device is always sharing a location, or any form of notification with our system in the background, then we’re always able to reach them in the event something goes wrong.

The way we manage privacy is we essentially make them invisible, and they become visible by consent or event. So, one of the main things in data protection laws is legitimate interest. So, you should only ever have access to somebody’s information if you actually need it.

And so, you either give consent, that you can use my location data, or there’s a legitimate interest, such as they are in a potential area where there is a risk to them. At that point, we can reveal that location, and therefore, we’re always in control.

AtlasNXT integrates geofencing, precision messaging, and real-time operational intelligence. How do you see these capabilities?

Geofences themselves have evolved. First, they just used to be sort of a digital perimeter. Now, we’ve introduced smart geofences, which essentially allows you to track people coming in and out of that perimeter. What we also do is see what impacts that perimeter.

So, we have various intelligence feeds we integrate with, and you can see if a particular perimeter is impacted by that. Now, with AI, you can also then say, is that piece of intelligence relevant to the perimeter I’m monitoring? When you’re integrating with data providers, you’re probably getting a few thousand events a day. As humans, we can’t consume that much information, or if we can, we can’t comprehend what it means.

With the power of AI, we can summarize information and allow it to provide clarity. We can also use it to generate reports and deliver trend analysis.

For example, it can extrapolate that over X period of time, we’ve had X types of risk, which gives us the ability to predict future risk. So, if there is, for example, a civil conflict near a particular geofence, you’ll find that there are X amount of panic alarms pressed in the vicinity.

So, what AI will be able to do is allow us to forecast whether, you know, because of this event, we can expect this many people to be at risk. Which sends out early warnings automatically without human intervention being required.

From our engagement with customers, it’s clear that they want to maintain an operator in the decision loop. So, our approach to AI is that it does the heavy lifting, but only suggests options to the operator. This ensures a human remains in command and makes the critical decisions.

AI is powerful and can save a great deal of time, but we’re not at the point where life-and-death security decisions can be handed to a machine. It performs the groundwork while a human operator remains in control. One of its strengths is pattern recognition.

It can say to the operator, ‘we’re noticing this, do you want to take this action?’ It’s a co-pilot, not a pilot. It also improves efficiency, as AI can process large volumes of information instantly, reducing response times. The earlier an organisation can intervene, the safer its people are. AI summarises the situation, and the operator decides whether and how to act.

And how important was InterSec for you and this region, Middle East, for your company?

We’re headquartered in London with two subsidiary organizations in the Emirates and a country office in Iraq. The region is hugely important. It’s where we originated as a species and as a company. So, we started in 2004 in Baghdad, and we’ve always maintained a large presence in Iraq, Kurdistan and across the Middle East.

The world isn’t getting any easier. The world is not getting any less risky. The world is not getting any more certain. Risk is spreading and becoming quite unpredictable whether you’re the president of an independent nation or an independent nation that belongs to somebody else. Risk is coming to you around the globe.

Our services become more and more important and more relevant globally. The region of the Middle East is important because I think it’s a region that understands security in a very central way.

It was our first attendance at InterSec. We’re a software provider. From what I’ve seen so far, there’s lots of hardware providers.

And that means there’s lots of potential partners for us. We can integrate any of their systems into our system and make access control useful for decision support which is what we’re here to do.

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INSIDE THE RISE OF AI INFLUENCERS WITH IDEA FARM

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Exclusive interview with Lewis Davey, Co-Founder Pixelagency.ai Founder & Creative Director at IDEA FARM

You’ve built a career around making brands culturally relevant through human creativity. What convinced you that the next frontier of storytelling might involve entirely virtual personalities?

AI Influencers have been around since 2018, but the technology has made huge strides in the past 18 months – and now hyper-realistic virtual personalities are exploding in popularity. Having worked in PR for 16 years, I think it’s good to be curious and I committed myself to learning about this space and becoming a bit of an expert – I was particularly interested in how brands could leverage AI Influencers as a new marketing channel. At Pixel what we present to brands is how AI Influencers can solve specific business challenges, drive efficiencies, and reach new audiences. This technology is much more than fancy images on Instagram.

Launching the world’s first AI Influencer Talent Management Agency sounds less like a business expansion and more like a prediction. What future did you see emerging that others weren’t paying attention to?

We launched Pixel 18 months ago with the intention of operating like a traditional talent management agency, connecting brands with existing AI Influencers. It’s certainly evolved, as the industry has gained more traction – and we’re banking on all brands owning their own AI Ambassador in the future.

Pixel isn’t just representing AI influencers, it’s helping brands create them. Why do you believe ownership of digital talent will become strategically important for brands?

Custom build AI Influencers is where we think the future is for brands. This is desirable for brands because they have an always-on marketing asset that can be online 24/7, with full creative control and tailored brand messaging. The AI Influencer can slot into their influencer portfolio, working alongside human influencers.

How do cultural sensitivities in the Middle East actually strengthen the case for AI Ambassadors rather than limit them?

I’ve always felt strongly that the Middle East is the perfect market for AI Ambassadors to thrive. There are reputational risks that come with working with real influencers, whereas a brand can have full control over messaging with its own AI Ambassadors. There’s 200 nationalities in Dubai – the other big selling point for AI Ambassadors is they can communicate in hundreds of languages, giving brands a versatile asset to target different demographics.

From a technology standpoint, what sits behind a successful AI Ambassador today, generative AI, language models, synthetic media, behavioural design, or something else entirely?

Of course, technology is important, and through our exclusive deal with The Clueless – the team behind the world’s biggest AI Influencer, Aitana Lopez, we’re bringing the best Gen-AI tools and talent to the GCC. But for me, it’s still the importance of the human behind the AI Ambassador – this is typically talented creatives, or social content creators, planning content schedules, leaning into culture and trends, and engaging with followers. Humans still have an important role in the storytelling element.

What safeguards should exist as AI-generated personalities become increasingly indistinguishable from humans?

It’s a fast-moving industry, and new rules and regulations will undoubtedly continue to come in. The EU will release new legislation in August, which could include the requirement of a watermark. The main one right now, which all our clients follow, is AI disclosure on Instagram. In an industry witnessing significant change, it’s important that responsible operators like Pixel and other partners work together to steer the industry in the right direction.

In an era of misinformation and rapidly evolving news cycles, how valuable is having a communication asset that is always accurate, controlled, and aligned with brand values?

I think it’s super important. During the recent conflict, we saw a segment of human influencers become unreliable, either posting misleading or sensationalised content. That’s troublesome for brands, so owning their own AI Ambassador that aligns with their values is going to become increasingly important. Now is the perfect time for brands in the Middle East to future proof their influencer strategy and consider an AI Ambassador.

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STRENGTHENING CYBERSECURITY WITHOUT COMPLEXITY

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Exclusive interview with Rabih Itani, Regional Director, Middle East and Africa, WatchGuard Technologies

SMEs across the region often struggle to balance cybersecurity investment with operational costs and complexity. What practical steps can smaller businesses take today to strengthen cyber resilience without overwhelming their internal IT resources?

Cybersecurity does not need to be complex to be effective for SMEs. The priority should be implementing a small number of high-impact security controls that significantly reduce risks. These include enabling multi-factor authentication (MFA), maintaining a disciplined patch management process, deploying endpoint protection, securing emails and DNS traffic, and investing in regular employee awareness training to combat phishing and credential misuse.

The urgency is clear. Our recent H2 2025 Internet Security Report revealed that 96 per cent of blocked malware was delivered through encrypted TLS connections, while 23 per cent of threats evaded traditional signature-based detection methods. At the same time, cloud adoption has expanded the attack surface, introducing risks associated with shadow IT, risky SaaS configurations, and compromised identities.

However, SMEs do not need to tackle these challenges alone. According to our 2026 global MSP survey, nearly half of organisations already rely on external providers to augment internal IT teams, while more than half cite 24/7 monitoring as a capability they cannot deliver in-house. WatchGuard’s Unified Security Platform was designed to support this model, delivering integrated protection across network, endpoint, identity, and cloud environments through a simplified, scalable approach. Partnering with a trusted MSP gives SMEs access to managed detection and response, continuous monitoring, and threat intelligence at scale.

Why are ransomware, phishing, and identity-based attacks increasingly becoming board-level business risks rather than just IT concerns?

Cybersecurity has evolved from an IT issue into a business-critical risk because the consequences of a successful attack extend far beyond technology systems. Ransomware, phishing, and identity-based attacks can disrupt operations, expose sensitive data, damage brand reputation, impact customer trust, and trigger regulatory scrutiny, all of which have direct financial and strategic implications.

This shift is reflected in boardroom priorities. Our 2026 MSP survey found that 75 per cent of organisations expect cybersecurity spending to increase over the next two years, while 67 per cent require additional support managing compliance obligations. Security is now firmly embedded in broader business planning and risk management discussions.

The threat landscape reinforces this reality. The survey revealed that 33 per cent of organisations experienced malware infiltration in the past year, 32 per cent suffered phishing or business email compromise attacks, and 29 per cent reported data breaches or unauthorised access incidents. Nearly 75 per cent experienced at least one cybersecurity incident overall. In February 2026, the UAE Cybersecurity Council highlighted increasing attacks targeting critical infrastructure, including ransomware, network infiltration, and AI-enabled offensive tools.

Our H2 2025 Internet Security Report further documented a 1,548 per cent increase in unique malware during Q4 2025, alongside nearly 2,600 public ransomware extortion incidents in a single quarter. Considering this, cybersecurity can no longer be considered a technical concern. Boards require visibility into organisational risk, resilience, and response readiness to protect business continuity and long-term growth.

Many businesses still operate with fragmented security environments built around multiple standalone tools. Why do you believe unified cybersecurity platforms are becoming increasingly important for organizations looking to simplify security operations while improving visibility and protection?

Currently, complexity is one of the greatest challenges facing cybersecurity teams. Organisations relying on multiple disconnected tools often struggle with fragmented security environments, inconsistent policy enforcement, and slower incident response times. Security teams are forced to correlate alerts across different dashboards, slowing response and increasing the risk of missed threats.

Modern cyberattacks do not target a single environment. It moves across endpoints, identities, networks, and cloud applications simultaneously, which requires an integrated approach to detection and response. Our Unified Security Platform combines network security, endpoint protection, identity management, cloud visibility, and threat intelligence into a single coordinated ecosystem. Solutions such as our CloudDR further enhance visibility by identifying shadow IT, detecting identity threats, and automatically remediating misconfigurations.

Market demands reflect this transition. Our 2026 MSP survey found that organisations are prioritising faster incident response (38 per cent), better communication and greater transparency (31 per cent), AI-driven threat detection (44 per cent), and stronger identity and access security capabilities (35 per cent). Meanwhile, 58 per cent expect to switch providers within three years, citing rising costs without added value (39 per cent), a major security incident (39 per cent), and slow response times (36 per cent) as the primary triggers. A unified platform helps address these challenges by reducing operational complexity while improving both security effectiveness and customer experience.

Having worked across the technological ecosystem as an end user, integrator, and provider, how have you seen cybersecurity conversations evolve over the past decade, and what do you believe organizations across the region are still underestimating today?

Cybersecurity conversations have changed significantly over the past decade. Organisations have moved beyond a traditional focus on perimeter security and compliance checklists toward a broader emphasis on cyber resilience, identity protection, cloud security, and business continuity.

One of the most encouraging developments has been the evolution of the customer-provider relationship. In our recent 2026 MSP survey, we found that nearly half of organisations now view their MSP as either a strategic advisor (24 per cent) or a proactive partner (23 per cent), rather than simply a technology supplier. Businesses increasingly expect guidance, expertise, and measurable outcomes, not just products.

However, numerous organisations still underestimate the operational side of cybersecurity. While investments in technologies continue to grow, areas such as identity governance, employee training and awareness, incident response planning, and policy enforcement often receive less attention. Across the Middle East region, we can see a robust commitment from leadership teams to strengthen cybersecurity, but execution gaps remain, particularly in cloud security and identity management.

As cyber threats continue evolving, what are some of the most common mistakes businesses still make when approaching cybersecurity strategies today?

One of the most common mistakes organisations make is viewing cybersecurity as a collection of tools rather than an ongoing operational strategy. Many businesses invest heavily in multiple security solutions but lack the resources, expertise, or processes required to manage them effectively. The result is often alert fatigue, fragmented visibility, and slower incident response. This is where dedicated MSPs play a major role. The data is compelling. Around 94 per cent of organisations using a dedicated MSP or MSSP report confidence in their protection against emerging threats, compared to just 83 per cent of those relying on consulting or professional services firms.

Another persistent challenge is underestimating identity-based risk. Today’s attackers increasingly prefer to exploit stolen credentials and over-privileged identities rather than breach networks directly. Our H2 2025 Threat Report highlights the growing prevalence of identity-focused attack techniques, underscoring the need for stronger access controls, continuous monitoring, and proactive detection capabilities.

Currently, organisations continue to underestimate the human element of cybersecurity. Our 2026 MSP survey found that 37 per cent of businesses want more cybersecurity awareness training, while 31 per cent seek greater communication and transparency from their security providers. Technology alone cannot deliver resilience; people and processes remain equally important.

Ultimately, resilient organisations are those that take a holistic approach, combining strong identity security, MFA, endpoint protection, employee awareness and training, and tested incident response plans within a single, continuously managed cybersecurity strategy.

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The Next Horizon: Manish Bakshi on BenQ’s Vision for a Human-Centric Digital Decade

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An exclusive conversation on AI ecosystems, smart learning and how modern leadership paradigms are redefining agility and long-term business resilience

As he marks nearly 25 years with BenQ Middle East, Managing Director Manish Bakshi looks firmly ahead, sharing his vision for the next decade of AI-powered ecosystems, smart learning, hybrid collaboration, esports and immersive home entertainment. In this exclusive Q&A, he discusses how BenQ is preparing to lead the next phase of digital transformation in the region.

After nearly 25 years of building BenQ in the region, what excites you most about the next decade?

Manish Bakshi: What excites me most is that we are moving beyond individual devices into connected, intelligent ecosystems. The next decade will not simply be about better hardware; it will be about how technology works together seamlessly to make experiences more intuitive, productive and human-centric.

At BenQ, we see the future being shaped by AI-powered ecosystems across education, enterprise and consumer technology. Whether it’s smart classrooms, intelligent meeting spaces or immersive home entertainment, our focus is on enabling technology that feels almost invisible, powerful, but effortless to use.

The Middle East is a particularly exciting region for this evolution because of the pace of digital transformation and the ambition we see across sectors.

You often speak about moving from products to ecosystems. What does that mean in practical terms?

Manish Bakshi: Traditionally, technology companies focused on standalone products. Today, the real opportunity lies in ecosystems, where displays, software, collaboration tools, cloud services and AI work in harmony.

For us, innovation is increasingly about creating connected solutions rather than isolated devices. In a meeting room, for example, the display, conferencing tools, wireless presentation systems and collaboration software should operate as one seamless environment.

AI will take this further by making those ecosystems adaptive, learning user preferences, simplifying workflows and enabling smarter decision-making.

That is where we see the future of technology heading.

Education is evolving rapidly. How do you see smart classrooms developing over the next five to ten years?

Manish Bakshi: We believe classrooms will become far more intelligent and personalised. The future is not just digital whiteboards replacing traditional ones, it’s AI-enabled learning environments where technology adapts to students’ needs in real time, provides teachers with actionable insights and makes learning more interactive and inclusive.

In the Middle East, governments and institutions are investing heavily in education transformation, and we see strong momentum around smart learning.

BenQ intends to play a leading role in this space by developing solutions that combine interactive displays, software ecosystems and well-being-focused innovation, including technologies designed around eye care and healthier learning environments.

The goal is simple: technology should support better learning outcomes, not add complexity.

Hybrid work has matured significantly. What’s the next chapter for workplace innovation?

Manish Bakshi: The first phase of hybrid work was about enabling remote participation. The next phase is about optimising the experience.

The future workplace will be frictionless. You walk into a meeting room, your device connects instantly, the room recognises your preferences, collaboration starts without delays, everything just works. We’re focused on intelligent meeting ecosystems that make collaboration natural regardless of location.

Another major focus will be human-centric workplace design, ergonomic displays, wellness-driven technologies and environments designed for long-term productivity and comfort.

The future office is not only smarter; it has to be healthier.

AI is driving much of today’s innovation conversation. How do you see AI transforming BenQ’s categories?

Manish Bakshi: AI will become the intelligence layer across everything we do. In education, it will personalise learning. In an enterprise, it will streamline collaboration and improve productivity. In consumer technology, it will create richer, more intuitive experiences.

But importantly, we see AI as an enabler, not a replacement for people. The role of AI is to remove friction, simplify complexity and empower users. That human-centric approach is very important to us.

Esports and gaming have become major growth sectors in the region. How do you view this opportunity?

Manish Bakshi: Esports is no longer niche; it is a mainstream ecosystem with economic, cultural and technological significance. The Middle East has made remarkable investments in gaming infrastructure, tournaments and talent development, and we see enormous long-term potential.

Our vision is not only to support professional esports through high-performance gaming innovation, but also to contribute to the growth of grassroots gaming communities in the region. This sector represents the convergence of technology, youth culture and digital creativity, and it will continue to expand.

BenQ has also been expanding into home entertainment. What trends do you see shaping that space?

Manish Bakshi: The home is being reimagined as an immersive entertainment space. Particularly in the GCC, where home experiences and family gatherings are such an important part of culture, we are seeing strong interest in cinematic home technologies. Laser TVs and ultra-short-throw projectors are transforming how people think about entertainment at home.

We see significant growth in this category over the coming years and plan to continue expanding solutions designed for the unique lifestyle and architectural preferences of the region.

This is one of the most exciting consumer opportunities ahead.

How do you see BenQ Middle East contributing to the region’s wider digital transformation agenda?

Manish Bakshi: Our role is to be more than a technology provider; we want to be a transformation partner. Across education, corporate and consumer segments, our focus is on supporting the region’s ambitions through innovation that aligns with future needs. That includes smarter ecosystems, sustainability-driven design, AI-enabled solutions and technologies that improve both productivity and well-being.

The Middle East is not just adopting innovation; in many areas, it is helping define it. We want to be part of shaping that future.

What leadership principle will guide you into this next decade?

Manish Bakshi: One principle remains constant: technology must serve people. No matter how advanced innovation becomes, the human element stays central. Leadership today is increasingly about orchestration, bringing together people, ideas and technology to create value collectively.

The next decade will belong to organisations that combine intelligence with purpose. For us at BenQ, the future is not simply about building smarter technologies. It is about enabling smarter, more meaningful experiences. And that is the vision driving our next chapter.

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