National Security stories
Businesses adopting AI for sensitive decisions may gain traceable answers as Lovelace targets reliability gaps with a verifiable data platform.
The move aims to widen security coverage as firms struggle to test expanding attack surfaces quickly enough.
Digital confidence could be shaken if quantum computing breaks signatures and updates, exposing organisations to fraud, tampering and mistrust.
Small defence contractors are left exposed as state-backed hackers spend years mapping supply chains and laying covert access routes before striking.
Rugged edge kit could let factories and telecoms run AI closer to devices, despite dust, vibration and extreme temperatures.
Businesses are racing to upgrade defences as Yubico says quantum computers could expose banking, health data and other records within years.
Customers will get a single view of suppliers and cyber exposure as fragmented third-party risk data is linked across separate systems.
The new hires should help SatVu turn HotSat-2 data into more US defence and intelligence work as it scales its constellation.
UK businesses face a growing data security dilemma as US laws can force American tech giants to hand over customer information.
Businesses face higher operational and cybersecurity risks as Anthropic's agents let non-technical teams build software that can act across systems.
The move could help Canadian chipmakers keep more design and production work at home, boosting a sector that already supports thousands of jobs.
The UK state-backed lender’s larger bet on quantum computing underscores policy support for scale-ups as Quantum Motion pursues commercial silicon-based machines.
Ottawa hopes the move will draw private investment and speed access to wafer fabrication for Canadian firms in AI, quantum and defence.
The investment will help Online Oceans scale production as defence buyers seek cheaper, longer-lasting surveillance of ports, borders and subsea cables.
The French AI group is targeting sensitive public-sector and enterprise uses in Singapore, where stricter controls can slow deployment but boost credibility.
The findings add pressure on ministers to modernise the 1990 Computer Misuse Act as breaches hit 43% of UK businesses and 28% of charities.
The badge could ease procurement by proving third-party kit has been tested to work with Roke systems, reducing integration risk for defence buyers.
Telecoms operators could protect existing networks from future quantum attacks without a full redesign as Nokia adds KETS hardware to its demo kit.
Information on about 500,000 volunteers is being offered for sale online, raising fears that stolen health and DNA data could be misused for years.
Technology leaders say the country risks falling further behind as AI adoption, cyber threats and rising costs outpace progress.