EGUIDE:
In this e-guide, find out how the Australian government is tackling cyber security issues head-on, why local businesses continue to fall prey to ransomware and how to mitigate supply chain security risks.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly we ask why the UK gov-ernment is spending $500m on a bankrupt satellite technolo-gy company. After a European court quashes the EU-US data sharing agreement, we examine the implications for a UK-EU data protection deal after Brexit. And how have small cloud suppliers coped in the pandemic? Read the issue now.
RESOURCE:
Letter from the Met Police to Stefania Maurizi, an investigative journalist with Italy's La Repubblica newspaper, confirming that the police service shared correspondence about one or more of three named WikiLeaks British editorial staff with the US Department of Justice. The letter is a response to a freedom of information request by Maurizi.
RESOURCE:
David Godkin, counsel for app developer Six4Three, outlines the legal arguments that will be used in the case against Facebook, as well as the relevant cases, statutes and authorities that apply.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, our latest buyer's guide assesses the challenges for cryptography in the emerging era of quantum computing. Google Cloud experts explain how the internet giant is preparing its datacentres for a world of AI. And we examine the privacy, compliance and backup issues from generative AI. Read the issue now.
EGUIDE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we find out how Ocado is making robot-human collaboration a reality. Unified com-munications has become a must-have lockdown capability – we assess the key technologies. And as contact-tracing apps emerge to help deal with the Covid-19 pandemic, we exam-ine the data privacy challenges. Read the issue now.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, as more data breaches come from inside an organisation, we examine how to balance information security and employee privacy. Tech City CEO Joanna Shields talks about the opportunity for CIOs from working with startups. And we look at how mobile technology can help improve patient care in the NHS. Read the issue now.
WHITE PAPER:
The need to protect sensitive data has increased dramatically in the past several years. This can be attributed to a continually-evolving environment in which business requirements have changed and in which new regulatory mandates have come into existence.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we look at gamification, the trend for corporate software to use techniques developed for computer games. After the Prism internet surveillance scandal, Switzerland hopes to become a safe location for cloud services. And we talk to an NHS CIO about the challenges of a paperless health service. Read the issue now.