Day Headlines in Computers News: 2025-06-23
-
Widening Middle Eastern war increases cyber risk (ComputerWeekly.com 2025-06-23 12:05:00)
With the entry of the US into the widening Middle Eastern conflict, cyber risk is likely to increase across the board.
-
Industrial strategy: Takeaways for UK tech innovations (ComputerWeekly.com 2025-06-23 10:19:00)
Labour wants to put the UK at the forefront of tech innovation. Its industrial strategy offers a funding boost for tech and lighter-touch regulation
-
Eutelsat secures €1.35bn to expand satellite offer (ComputerWeekly.com 2025-06-23 08:53:00)
Contemplated major capital increase designed to secure Eutelsat’s long-term strategic vision has been anchored by the French state and other reference shareholders
-
Autonomous vehicle technology market set to roll (ComputerWeekly.com 2025-06-23 08:39:00)
Research from internet of things specialist analyst projects rapid adoption of autonomous vehicle technology over the next five years.
-
Interview: Rolf Krolke, CIO, The Access Group (ComputerWeekly.com 2025-06-23 07:00:00)
We talk to The Access Group’s CIO about integration and ongoing management of legacy systems in an extremely acquisitive company, and the worldwide storage refresh he’s overseeing as part of that process
-
Interview: Rolf Krolke, regional technology director, The Access Group (ComputerWeekly.com 2025-06-23 07:00:00)
We talk to The Access Group’s technology director for APAC about integration and ongoing management of legacy systems in an extremely acquisitive company, and the worldwide storage refresh he’s overseeing as part of that process
-
Police to gain powers to grab online data when they seize phones and laptops (ComputerWeekly.com 2025-06-23 05:15:00)
Academics and civil liberties experts say that proposed ‘authoritarian’ powers to allow police to trawl online and cloud services used by owners of seized devices should require approval from a judge
-
Clouded judgement: Resilience, risk and the rise of repatriation (ComputerWeekly.com 2025-06-23 04:00:00)
Geopolitics, data sovereignty and rising costs are driving a change in cloud thinking, but it’s slow progress