All articles by Stephanie Stacey
OneWeb finished launching its first-gen satellite network. Now comes the hard part
This year, OneWeb finally reached the threshold for global broadband coverage. How long can it stay relevant in a crowded and costly field?
India wants its own generative AI revolution
India has honed a reputation as the world’s favourite back office. But can the workers powering the country’s IT industry adapt to the rapid rise of generative AI?
Why are UK police forces being overwhelmed by cybercrime?
Fraud is now one of the UK’s most common offences – but police forces have been left floundering in their efforts to combat cybercrime.
Could quantum computing make our energy grid sustainable?
Companies like E.ON and EDF are pinning their hopes on quantum optimisation to help achieve big sustainability targets and weather future energy crises.
Open source energised AI. LLMs are complicating matters
Businesses are turning to affordable, open-source LLMs for highly-specific use cases. Critics worry about them getting into the wrong hands.
Trade unions are fighting to make AI work for the workers
The workers, united, will never be defeated, say union leaders — so long as tough legislation is passed to weave worker input into AI-powered decisions.
Large language models will transform corporate cybersecurity – for good and ill
ChatGPT scares some cybersecurity professionals. Others say LLMs could be an asset for the industry.
Did North Korea just hack your hospital?
Hospitals are attractive targets for hackers. Here’s how healthcare organisations can avoid being compromised by ransomware.
Jailbreaking ChatGPT is the new virtual pastime. Why won’t LLMs stick to their own rules?
Developers are racing to patch vulnerabilities used to make generative AI systems shed their safety restrictions. Time isn’t on their side.
China dominates the rare earth metal supply chain. Now Europe wants to create its own
China effectively monopolises the metals and minerals essential to the green transition. Attempts to exploit new seams outside the country, however, risk shattering indigenous communities and habitats.