News Summary
SAN JOSE, Calif., April 7, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) today announced the release of its latest annual industrial research report, the State of Industrial AI Report, examining how critical infrastructure like factories, utilities, and transportation systems are accelerating their direct deployments of AI. The report provides a data‑driven view into how industrial organizations are adopting AI, the challenges they face as AI moves into live operations, and the opportunities created as AI becomes embedded in physical systems, infrastructure, and workflows.

The double-blind global study surveyed more than 1,000 operational technology (OT) decision‑makers across 19 countries and 21 industrial sectors. The findings show that AI is now delivering measurable operational benefits in use cases such as process automation, automated quality inspection, predictive maintenance, logistics, and energy forecasting. However, many organizations are increasingly constrained by readiness gaps in networking infrastructure, cybersecurity, and IT/OT operating models as AI shifts into real‑time, production‑grade use in physical environments.
"Industrial AI is moving from experimentation into production, where AI systems sense, reason, and act in the real world," said Vikas Butaney, SVP/GM of Secure Routing and Industrial IoT at Cisco. "At this stage, success is no longer determined by models alone, but by whether networks, security, and teams are ready to support AI at the edge, in motion, and at scale. The research shows that organizations confident in scaling AI are those treating infrastructure, cybersecurity, and IT/OT collaboration as foundational, not optional."
Key Takeaways from the State of Industrial AI Report
The survey shows industrial AI has moved from a future consideration to active deployment, with 61% of organizations now using AI in live industrial operations where performance, reliability, and security have direct physical consequences, and 20% reporting scaled, mature deployments. Across manufacturing, transportation, and utilities, AI is powering machine vision, robotics, mobility, and safety‑critical operations. Most organizations plan to increase AI spending (83%), and nearly nine in ten expect meaningful outcomes within the next two years (87%). Yet as adoption accelerates, many are struggling to sustain and expand deployments, with readiness across network infrastructure, security, and skills increasingly determining whether AI can scale consistently across core physical environments.
Background:
Additional Resources:
About Cisco
Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) is the worldwide technology leader that is revolutionizing the way organizations connect and protect in the AI era. For more than 40 years, Cisco has securely connected the world. With its industry leading AI-powered solutions and services, Cisco enables its customers, partners and communities to unlock innovation, enhance productivity and strengthen digital resilience. With purpose at its core, Cisco remains committed to creating a more connected and inclusive future for all. Discover more on The Newsroom and follow us on X at @Cisco.
Cisco and the Cisco logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Cisco and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and other countries. A listing of Cisco's trademarks can be found at http://www.cisco.com/go/trademarks. Third-party trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word 'partner' does not imply a partnership relationship between Cisco and any other company.
Disclaimer: Many of the products and features mentioned are still in development and will be made available as they are finalized, subject to ongoing evolution in development and innovation. The timeline for their release is subject to change.
Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2808325/Cisco_Logo.jpg
View original content:https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/cisco-research-industrial-ai-moves-into-physical-operations-readiness-gaps-determine-scale-302735314.html
Das Landgericht Ellwangen hat eine Klage gegen die irische Tochtergesellschaft des Meta-Konzerns abgewiesen und damit die Übermittlung von Facebook- und Instagram-Daten in die USA grundsätzlich gebilligt. Nach Auffassung der Kammer haben Nutzerinnen und Nutzer keinen rechtlichen Anspruch darauf, dass ihre personenbezogenen Daten ausschließlich innerhalb Europas gespeichert und verarbeitet werden. Grenzüberschreitende Datenflüsse seien für global konzipierte soziale Netzwerke technisch erforderlich und datenschutzrechtlich zulässig, heißt es in dem Urteil mit dem Aktenzeichen 3 O 480/24.
Der Kläger hatte verlangt, Meta solle die Übertragung seiner Daten in die USA unterbinden und insbesondere eine mögliche Zugänglichkeit für US-Sicherheitsbehörden ausschließen. Zudem forderte er Schadenersatz wegen eines behaupteten Kontrollverlusts über seine personenbezogenen Informationen. Das Gericht folgte dieser Argumentation nicht. Die Suche nach anderen Nutzern in einem weltweiten Netzwerk setze zwingend einen internationalen Datenaustausch voraus, der gemäß Datenschutzgrundverordnung zur Erfüllung des mit Meta geschlossenen Nutzungsvertrags erforderlich sei.
Eine zentrale Rolle in der Begründung spielte der Angemessenheitsbeschluss der EU-Kommission zum "EU-US Data Privacy Framework" vom 10. Juli 2023. Die Richter verwiesen darauf, dass dieser Beschluss verbindlich ein angemessenes Datenschutzniveau in den Vereinigten Staaten feststelle. Vor diesem Hintergrund bedürften Übermittlungen personenbezogener Daten in die USA keiner gesonderten Genehmigung. Damit stützt das Gericht seine Entscheidung ausdrücklich auf den von Brüssel vorgegebenen Rechtsrahmen für transatlantische Datentransfers.
Auch den verlangten immateriellen Schadenersatz sprach das Landgericht Ellwangen dem Kläger nicht zu. Er habe einen konkreten Schaden nicht hinreichend darlegen können, urteilte die Kammer. Das Verfahren macht deutlich, welche Bedeutung der aktuelle EU-Rahmen für Datenübermittlungen in die USA in der gerichtlichen Praxis bereits hat – und dass Nutzer, die sich pauschal gegen die Speicherung und Verarbeitung ihrer Social-Media-Daten außerhalb Europas wenden, in Deutschland derzeit auf erhebliche rechtliche Hürden treffen.