• Huge Fortnite leak reveals mid season live event coming soon
    www.videogamer.com
    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games hereFortnite seasonal live events have become a cornerstone of player involvement, transforming the end of each season into a global event. As each chapter and season progresses, players anticipate not only narrative twists and new skins but also live events that transform the island in surprising ways. Mid-season live events have added an extra layer of excitement, breaking the traditional pattern of giving big storyline twists or gameplay adjustments midway through a season. The Doctor Doom event in Fortnite Chapter 5 Season 4 followed this trend where players were treated to an in-game boss fight with Doctor Doom.The hype is now developing around a leak pointing to a mid-season live event for Chapter 6 Season 1 which may feature a critical plot twist. Heres everything known so far about it.Fortnite Chapter 6 Season 1 rumored to feature mid-season live eventAccording to the latest Fortnite leaks by data miners such as HYPEX, two updates are arriving to the game within a span of five days. These updates will fall on January 31, 2025, which will bring OG Chapter 1 Season 2, and February 4 which is rumored to bring a build-up event or a countdown feature similar to the Doctor Doom live event.Fortnite Chapter 6 mini-live event leaked. Image credit HYPEX.While this is just a rumor plainly based on datamined files from the game, some players have argued that these wont be two different updates. One such player wrote, It is super weird though. Feb 4 is listed on Trello but I havent seen any extra version in the testing servers. Theres still just v33.30 and v34.00. Theres no v33.31 or v33.40. I kinda suspect the Jan 31 update was the Feb 4 update moved up IMO.The existing Godzilla event is also expected to expire on January 31, implying that all Godzilla gameplay features will be vaulted in the game, but players are anticipating a Godzilla vs Kong climax live event to take place soon.Fans, on the other hand, are looking forward to a Demon Slayer crossover that has long been hinted at for Fortnite, although rumors point to a Devil May Cry collaboration before the popular anime. FortnitePlatform(s):Android, iOS, macOS, Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series S/XGenre(s):Action, Massively Multiplayer, Shooter9VideoGamerRelated TopicsFortnite Subscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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  • Game breaking Marvel Rivals bug makes Moon Knights ult shred enemies in seconds
    www.videogamer.com
    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games hereIn Marvel Rivals, players have encountered many game-breaking bugs that are surprisingly changing the battlefield. As they progress through the game, they discover flaws that can transform standard heroes into overpowered juggernauts, shifting the balance of power in matches.One of the most recent bugs concerns a character whose abilities have been unintentionally buffed to epic proportions, thus causing his stats to skyrocket. These reports circulating are about Moon Knights ultimate ability, which appears to hit harder than it should, raising eyebrows and concerns alike.Potential Marvel Rivals bug buffs Moon Knights ultimate ability to hit twice the damageA Marvel Rivals player named Sidewaysgts shared a video on Reddit showing Moon Knights ultimate ability Hand of Khonshu dealing 2x damage than intended to Galacta bots in Training Mode and enemies across matches.Moon Knights ult deals 2x damage than usual in Marvel Rivals. Image credit Reddit/Sidewaysgts.Along with the video, Sideways shared their hypothesis of the bug where they wrote, Been doing some testing, and one of two things is going on. Either the description of Moon Knights ult is lacking vital information, or it is bugged and its doing double the cited damage.They continued, According to NetEase, the talons in Moon Knights ult should be doing 75 damage, with a radius of 5 meters. They actually each do 150. By proving their claim, Sideways explained things further and said, More specifically with some testing, my best guess is each talon is producing 2 AoE fields, one field does 75 damage with a radius of 5 meters as it should, but there is another AoE that also does 75 damage, but has a range closer to 10 meters. However, this second AoE will only reach within the casting circle of the ult (however the 5-meter radius AOE can reach outside the casting circle)To summarise the video, two bots are observed during an ultimate ability demonstration. The bot on the left takes 150 damage from the first talon, while the one on the right, 9 meters away, takes 75 damage. The talons hit in a predictable circular pattern across three points. The second talon hits both bots for 150 damage, killing the left bot and leaving the right with 25 HP (bots have 250 HP total). The third talon finishes off the remaining bot, suggesting the ultimate might be dealing double damage or has an undocumented effect.While this claim is still being tested by players one chimed in saying, they wondered how a 75-damage ability managed to shred a tank that fast. On the other hand, another trick is allowing Loki players to cheat death across Marvel Rivals matches, so do check that out as well.Marvel RivalsPlatform(s):macOS, PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series S, Xbox Series XGenre(s):Fighting, ShooterRelated TopicsMarvel Rivals Subscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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  • A Chinese startup just showed every American tech company how quickly it's catching up in AI
    www.businessinsider.com
    An AI startup in China just showed how it's closing the gap with America's top AI labs.The Chinese startup DeepSeek released a new AI model on Monday that appears to rival OpenAI's o1.Its reasoning capabilities have stunned top American AI researchers.Donald Trump started his new presidency by declaring America must lead the world. He just got a warning shot from an AI crack team in China that's ready to show that US technological supremacy is not a given.Meet DeepSeek, a Chinese startup spun off from a decade-old hedge fund that calculates shrewd trades with AI and algorithms. Its latest release, which came on Trump's inauguration day, has left much of America's top industry researchers stunned.In a paper released Monday, DeepSeek unveiled a new flagship AI model called R1 that shows off a new level of "reasoning." Why it has left such a huge impression on AI experts in the US matters.Some of Silicon Valley's most well-resourced AI labs have increasingly turned to "reasoning" as a frontier of research that can evolve their technology from a student-like level of intelligence to something that eclipses human intelligence entirely.To accomplish this, OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, and others have focused on ensuring models spend more time thinking before responding to a user query. It's an expensive, intensive process that demands a lot from the computing power buzzing underneath.As a reminder, OpenAI fully released o1 "models designed to spend more time thinking before they respond" to a glowing reception in December after an initial release in September. DeepSeek's R1 shows just how quickly it can close the gap.DeepSeek narrows the gapWhat exactly does R1 do? For one, DeepSeek says R1 achieves "performance comparable to OpenAI o1 across math, code, and reasoning tasks."Its research paper says this is possible thanks to "pure reinforcement learning," a technique that Jim Fan, a senior research manager at Nvidia, said was reminiscent of the secret behind making Google DeepMind's AlphaZero a master at games such as go and chess from scratch, "without imitating human grandmaster moves first." He wrote on X that this was "the most significant takeaway from the paper."DeepSeek, which launched in 2023, said in its paper that it did this because its goal was to explore the potential of AI to "develop reasoning capabilities without any supervised data." This is a common technique used by AI researchers. The company also said that an earlier version of R1 called R1-Zero gave them an "aha moment" in which the AI "learns to allocate more thinking time to a problem by reevaluating its initial approach."The end result offers what the Wharton professor Ethan Mollick described as responses from R1 that read "like a human thinking out loud."Notably, this level of transparency into the development of AI has been hard to come by in the notes published by companies such as OpenAI when releasing models of a similar aptitude.Nathan Lambert, a research scientist at the Allen Institute for AI, said on Substack that R1's paper "is a major transition point in the uncertainty in reasoning model research" as "until now, reasoning models have been a major area of industrial research without a clear seminal paper."Staying true to the open spirit, DeepSeek's R1 model, critically, has been fully open-sourced, having obtained an MIT license the industry standard for software licensing.Together, these elements of R1 provide complications to US players caught up in an AI arms race with China Trump's main geopolitical rival for a few reasons.First, it shows that China can rival some of the top AI models in the industry and keep pace with cutting-edge developments coming out of Silicon Valley.Second, open-sourcing highly advanced AI could also challenge companies that are seeking to make huge profits by selling their technology.OpenAI, for instance, introduced a ChatGPT Pro plan in December that costs $200 a month. Its selling point was that it included "unlimited access" to its smartest model at the time, o1. If an open-source model offers similar capabilities for free, the incentive to buy a costly paid subscription could, in theory, diminish.Nvidia's Fan described the situation like this on X: "We are living in a timeline where a non-US company is keeping the original mission of OpenAI alive truly open, frontier research that empowers all."DeepSeek has shown off reasoning know-how before. In November, the company released an "R1-lite-preview" that showed its "transparent thought process in real time." In December, it released a model called V3 to serve as a new, bigger foundation for future reasoning in models.It's a big reason American researchers see a meaningful improvement in the latest model, R1.Theo Browne, a software developer behind a popular YouTube channel for the tech community, said that "the new DeepSeek R1 model is incredible." Tanay Jaipuria, a partner investing in AI at Silicon Valley's Wing VC, also described it as "incredible."Awni Hannun, a machine-learning researcher at Apple, said a key advantage of R1 was that it was less intensive, showing that the industry was "getting close to open-source o1, at home, on consumer hardware," referring to OpenAI's reasoning model introduced last year.The model can be "distilled," meaning smaller but also powerful versions can run on hardware that's far less intensive than the computing power loaded into servers in data centers many tech companies depend on to run their AI models.Hannun demonstrated this by sharing a clip on X of a 671 billion-parameter version of R1 running on two Apple M2 Ultra chips, responding with reason to a prompt asking whether a straight or a flush is better in a game of Texas Hold'em. Hannun said its response came "faster than reading speed."AI censorshipR1 does appear to have one key problem. The former OpenAI board member Helen Toner pointed out on X that there were demos of R1 "shutting itself down when asked about topics the CCP doesn't like."Toner did suggest, however, that "the censorship is obviously being done by a layer on top, not the model itself." DeepSeek didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.It is worth noting, of course, that OpenAI has introduced a new model called o3 that's meant to be a successor to the o1 model DeepSeek is rivaling. Lambert said in his blog post that OpenAI was "likely technically ahead," but he added the key caveat that the o3 model was "not generally available," nor would basic information such as its "weights" be available anytime soon.Given DeepSeek's track record so far, don't be surprised if its next model shows parity to o3. America's tech leaders may have met their match in China.
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  • That upcoming Witcher anime will have a touch more of the live-action show than you might have thought as it apparently includes a cut scene from the series
    www.vg247.com
    The Witcher: Sirens of the Deep is due out next month, and it turns out a scene originally meant for the live-action show is being included in it. Read more
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  • UK Charts: Black Ops 6 Fends Off A Wave Of Nintendo Hits
    www.nintendolife.com
    Image: Nintendo LifeThe UK presents a largely familiar picture in the physical charts this week, though there have been a couple of notable shake ups.Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 finds itself at the top of the pack, though a wave of Nintendo titles are snapping at its heels, including Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, Donkey Kong Country Returns HD, Super Mario Party Jamboree, and strangely enough Super Mario RPG, which leapfrogged from position 36 all the way up to number 5.EA Sports FC 25 didn't do so well this week and was actually beaten by its predecessor, EA Sports FC 24. The former fell all the way down to number 16, while the latter re-emerged in the top 40 to land at number 7. We can only imagine that some seriously aggressive discounts managed to convince buyers to go for the older title.Subscribe to Nintendo Life on YouTube794kWatch on YouTube Here's a look at this week's full top 40, with platform breakdowns for all of the titles available on other consoles as well as the Switch:Last WeekThis WeekGamePlatform Split21Call of Duty: Black Ops 642Mario Kart 8 Deluxe13Donkey Kong Country Returns HD54Super Mario Party Jamboree365Super Mario RPG66Minecraft-7EA Sports FC 24PS5 92%, PS4 6%, Switch 2%, Xbox 0%88Grand Theft Auto V119Animal Crossing: New Horizons710Nintendo Switch Sports911Super Mario Bros. Wonder3712Lego Harry Potter CollectionPS5 43%, Switch 42%, Xbox 11%, PS4 4%1613Just Dance 2024 EditionSwitch 97%, PS5 3%2014Sonic X Shadow GenerationsSwitch 56%, PS5 31%, Xbox 9%, PS4 4%1015Dynasty Warriors Origins316EA Sports FC 25PS5 51%, Switch 29%, PS4 18%, Xbox 3%1517Call of Duty: Black Ops III1318Hogwarts LegacySwitch 40%, PS5 28%, PS4 18%, Xbox 9%-19Disney Epic Mickey: RebrushedSwitch 53%, PS5 45%, Xbox 1%, PC 0%1420Mafia Trilogy1821Astro Bot-22WWE 2K243823Dark Souls Trilogy1924The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom2225Red Dead Redemption 21726The Witcher III: Wild Hunt Complete Edition2527Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker SagaPS5 63%, Switch 27%, PS4 6%, Xbox 4%2128The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom2329Super Mario Odyssey2630Red Dead RedemptionSwitch 61%, PS4 39%-31Crash Bandicoot N.Sane TrilogySwitch 89%, PS4 10%, Xbox 1%2432Black Myth: Wukong3033Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy - The Definitive EditionPS4 43%, Switch 40%, Xbox 17%3434Pokmon Scarlet-35Mario & Luigi: Brothership3236Pokmon Violet3137Super Smash Bros. Ultimate3538Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle-39Sonic SuperstarsSwitch 67%, PS5 20%, Xbox 10%, PS4 2%3940MySims Cozy Bundle[Compiled by GfK]< Last week's charts Returns returnsDid you pick up anything new this week? Let us know what you think of the latest charts in the comments below.Related GamesSee AlsoShare:03 Nintendo Lifes resident horror fanatic, when hes not knee-deep in Resident Evil and Silent Hill lore, Ollie likes to dive into a good horror book while nursing a lovely cup of tea. He also enjoys long walks and listens to everything from TOOL to Chuck Berry. Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...Related ArticlesRandom: Donkey Kong Country's Artist Reacts To Nintendo's Redesign"Everything changes!"Nintendo Expands Switch Online's SNES Library With Three More TitlesIncluding a special Super Famicom release...Opinion: My Daughter Made Me Realise That Mario Wonder's Difficulty Options Need WorkYoshi or Nabbit, make your choiceNintendo Joins 'Fuji TV' Commercial Boycott Following Sex ScandalOne of many companies pulling adsSega Launches Its Own Free Account Service With Unique Member RewardsSign up! Y'know, if you want
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  • TalkTalk investigating data breach after hacker claims theft of customer data
    techcrunch.com
    U.K. telecoms giant TalkTalk has confirmed that it is investigating a data breach after a hacker claimed to have stolen the personal information of millions of customers.In a post on a popular cybercrime forum seen by TechCrunch, an individual using the alias b0nd claimed to have stolen the personal data of more than 18.8 million current and former TalkTalk subscribers. This data, which the threat actor is offering for sale, supposedly includes customer names, email addresses, IP addresses, phone numbers and subscriber PINs.In a statement to TechCrunch, TalkTalk spokesperson Liz Holloway confirmed the company is investigating the data breach, but said the 18.8 million figure claimed by the hacker is wholly inaccurate and very significantly overstated.TechCrunch understands that TalkTalk currently has approximately 2.4 million customers.As part of our regular security monitoring, given our ongoing focus on protecting customers personal data, we were made aware of unexpected access to, and misuse of, one of our third-party suppliers systems, Holloway told TechCrunch. Our Security Incident Response team are continuing to work with the supplier regarding this matter and protective containment steps were taken immediately.Holloway declined to name the third-party supplier, but screenshots shared by b0nd suggest the data was stolen from CSGs Ascendon platform, which TalkTalk uses for subscription management. CSG did not immediately respond to TechCrunchs questions.TechCrunch understands that the personal details of a small subset of TalkTalk customers are stored in Ascendon. Holloway confirmed to TechCrunch that no billing or financial information was stored on this system.TalkTalk was previously fined 400,000 after a 2015 data breach in which hackers stole the personal data of 157,000 customers, including some financial information. The U.K.s Information Commissioner said at the time that TalkTalk had failed to implement the most basic cyber security measures, enabling hackers to penetrate its systems with ease.Topics
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  • Solukons innovative depowdering system in use for Nyx space capsules
    3dprintingindustry.com
    Post-processing solutions provider Solukons SFM-AT350-E ultrasonic depowdering system, integrated with Smart Powder Recuperation (SPR)-Pathfinder software, is now a part of European space travel start-up The Exploration Companys production process for 3D printed rocket components.The system is expected to ensure thorough and efficient cleaning of metal parts essential for the reusable Nyx space capsules. Designed for medium-sized components up to 100 kilograms, the SFM-AT350-E employs piezoelectric ultrasonic excitation to remove powder from laser-melted metal parts.This method, developed by Solukon, offers a quieter and more energy-efficient alternative to conventional pneumatic vibrators, significantly reducing the need for compressed air while protecting delicate materials during cleaning.Our main focus is on the development of reusable space capsules for the transportation of payloads and people into space, says The Exploration Companys CEO and founder Hlne Huby.Solukon CEO Andreas Hartmann and The Exploration Companys Hlne Huby, in front of the Solukon SFM-AT350-E.Using AM solutions for spaceThis isnt the first time The Exploration Company is using 3D printing solutions for its space-related efforts.Before Solukon, the space travel start-up partnered with German technology company TRUMPF to produce spacecraft components for missions to Earths orbit and the moon. A key focus of this alliance involves TRUMPFs 3D printing technology, which will be used to create parts for the Huracn and Mistral engines of the Nyx spacecraft.Production was planned to begin in spring 2024 near Munich, Germany. Initial mission goals aim to target Earth orbit in 2026, followed by a lunar mission in 2028, starting with freight transport and eventually aiming for human space travel. Supported by 65 million in funding and a team of 120, the start-up backed 3D printings role in reducing material waste compared to conventional aerospace manufacturing techniques.Now with Solukons SPR-Pathfinder software integrated with the depowdering system, the startup can seamlessly calculate precise movements to ensure all residual powder is eliminated from intricate geometries.According to The Exploration Companys Senior AM Engineer Maxi Strixner, the simulation capabilities of the software allow developers to assess a components design early in the process, identifying potential cleaning challenges and suggesting adjustments to improve postprocessing outcomes.Precision plays a critical role in the production of components for the Nyx space capsule. Any leftover powder in these parts could jeopardize performance during space missions. By automating and optimizing the cleaning process, Solukons system ensures that each component is prepared to meet the rigorous demands of space-grade manufacturing.Sustainability remains a key consideration for The Exploration Company, and the adoption of Solukons technology supports this objective. Powder removed during cleaning is collected without contamination, enabling reuse in future production cycles. Moreover, the use of ultrasonic excitation reduces reliance on compressed air, resulting in lower energy consumption and further material savings.The Solukon SFM-AT350. Photo via Solukon.Post-processing for aerospace componentsAway from The Exploration Company, private US aerospace firm Launcher chose Solukon as its powder removal systems supplier to enhance the post-processing of large 3D printed rocket components, including engines and combustion chambers. As a part of this deal, Solukons SFM-AT1000-S system was selected to address the challenges of depowdering complex geometries, such as intricate internal structures and cooling channels.Equipped with SPR technology, the system automates powder removal through two-axis rotation and targeted vibration, delivering efficiency, precision, and safety. Designed to handle parts up to 800 kg and 1,000 mm high, the system proved well-suited to the rigorous demands of aerospace manufacturing.On another note, UK-based 3D printing post-processing firm Rivelin Robotics announced that it is leading Project CAMPFIRE, a government-funded initiative to automate the post-processing of metal 3D printed parts. As part of this project, Rivelin Robotics partnered with GKN Aerospace to address challenges in support material removal and finishing complex geometries, which are vital for productivity and quality in aerospace manufacturing.Featuring advanced 3D vision and force control algorithms, Rivelins Netshape Robots were chosen to deliver precise and automated finishing with minimal human input. In doing so, GKN Aerospace planned to assess the systems performance and provide feedback to refine future models.Who won the 20243D Printing Industry Awards?All the news fromFormnext 2024.To stay up to date with the latest 3D printing news, dont forget to subscribe to the 3D Printing Industry newsletter or follow us on Twitter, or like our page on Facebook.While youre here, why not subscribe to our Youtube channel? Featuring discussion, debriefs, video shorts, and webinar replays.Featured image shows the Solukon SFM-AT350. Photo via Solukon.
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  • Public cloud: Data sovereignty and data security in the UK
    www.computerweekly.com
    The UK governments decision to designate datacentres as critical national infrastructure (CNI) in September 2024 signalled its ambition to build a digital economy that is secure and globally competitive.But behind the headlines about protecting against cyber crime and IT blackouts lies a more complicated reality a sector grappling with policy uncertainty, reliance on foreign cloud giants and a data sovereignty agenda that looks increasingly compromised.In a blog post, Forrester principal analyst Tracy Woo wrote: New sovereignty requirements such as SecNumCloud, Cloud de Confiance from France, and the Cloud Computing Compliance Controls Catalog (C5) from Germany, along with the push to keep data in-country, have created a broader push for private and sovereign clouds.But the promise of protected infrastructure rings hollow when hyperscalers openly admit they cannot guarantee that UK government data stored in cloud services such as Microsoft 365 and Azure will remain within national borders.Woo points out that countries in the European Union (EU) and Asia-Pacific (APAC) have been attempting to more heavily leverage non-US-based cloud providers, create sovereign clouds, or leave workloads on-premise.In the UK, regulatory scrutiny is exposing the fragile state of the UKs digital independence. Looking at the UKs approach to data sovereignty, law firm Kennedys Law describes the Data Use and Access (DUA) Bill, which was published in October 2024, as a more flexible risk-based approach for international data transfers.Kennedys notes that the new test requires that the data protection standards in the destination jurisdiction must not be materially lower than those in the UK. According to Kennedys, this standard is less rigid than the EUs essential equivalence requirement but raises questions about how materially lower will be interpreted in practice.Understandably, with the governments reliance on cloud-based productivity tools, concerns about compliance with UK data protection laws have intensified.The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is now investigating cloud market practices that could lock customers into foreign providers. A provisional report is expected in early 2025, setting the stage for potential regulatory reforms aimed at boosting data sovereignty and curbing monopolistic practices.This is not before time for Mark Boost, CEO of Civo, a UK-based cloud hosting specialist. The inability to ensure data remains within UK borders underscores the risks of depending on hyperscalers, warns Boost. If we keep outsourcing critical data infrastructure, we risk losing more than just technical control, we lose national independence.The CMAs review could reshape the countrys digital future, potentially mandating greater transparency and requiring UK data storage guarantees from global cloud providers. This is something Boost has been talking about for some time.Transparency isnt just about where data is stored, its about how datacentres are powered, maintained and secured, he says. His argument highlights the essential connection between data sovereignty and operational clarity, urging providers to adopt clearer accountability measures. The inability to ensure data remains within UK borders underscores the risks of depending on hyperscalers. If we keep outsourcing critical data infrastructure, we risk losing more than just technical control, we lose national independence Mark Boost, CivoDespite these challenges around transparency, the UK datacentre industry has seen promising signs, particularly in regional investment. The governments recent announcement of a 250m datacentre project in Salford showcases how local government cooperation and targeted investment can drive growth. But such projects remain exceptions rather than the rule.Luisa Cardani, head of datacentres at TechUK and author of the report Foundations for the future: How datacentres can supercharge UK economic growth, warns that without a national policy statement (NPS), the datacentre sector risks becoming fragmented. Local planning authorities lack the expertise and resources to approve projects efficiently, creating bottlenecks that could delay critical infrastructure developments for years.The industry wants to work with local people and authorities, but clear national planning guidance is missing, says Cardani. Without a coherent strategy, were stuck in a cycle of fragmented decisions and regulatory inertia.The proposed inclusion of datacentres under the nationally significant infrastructure projects (NSIP) regime could streamline the approval process, ensuring faster decision-making. However, this remains, for the moment at least, more of an aspiration. In reality, investment will remain stalled until the UK develops a coherent, national approach that balances public and private interests while streamlining the project approval process.Data sovereignty and security requirements are fundamental to this, and to a large extent it will be market forces that determine the shape and size of the UKs datacentre industry. On this front, Alvin Nguyen, senior analyst at Forrester, says businesses must recognise the different risk profiles posed by local and hyperscaler-operated datacentres.It should be expected that hyperscalers will have more bandwidth, more scalability and more redundancy than their more localised counterparts, but having datacentres classified as critical to the UKs infrastructure may help with mitigating some, but not all, security risks, he says.Nguyen also questions whether data sovereignty debates might be over-simplified in some cases.With data security, it comes down to what the organisations requirements are to determine whether or not to go to a hyperscaler or a local datacentre, he says. With sovereignty, that is a bit different. If there are components to the sovereignty laws to restrict access or use of data outside of the local datacentres, hyperscalers will need to ensure that guardrails are in place.Nguyens comments underscore the complexity of managing sensitive data across hybrid environments. Rather than focusing solely on whether to choose a local or global provider, businesses should consider managing workloads across hybrid cloud environments more strategically.Many organisations will find a mix of cloud and datacentres makes the most sense ... the risk profile of each is different and that blend of risk when combining cloud and datacentres can be made to be optimised for them, he says.The security risks associated with data sovereignty are multifaceted, extending far beyond simple data storage concerns. For businesses in regulated sectors, particularly financial services, the stakes are immense.Jon Cosson, head of IT and chief information security officer at wealth management firm JM Finn, underscores the potential dangers when businesses assume that using a large cloud provider automatically guarantees security.Its absolutely imperative you know where your data is and how to secure it, he warns. You would not believe how many businesses still just rely on somebody else.The issue is compounded by the jurisdictional complexity of global cloud services. When sensitive data crosses borders, it may fall under multiple regulatory regimes, raising questions about legal access and government overreach. This concern has been amplified by legislation such as the US Cloud Act.In 2019, the then home secretary, Priti Patel, signed a US Cloud Act Agreement covering the UK and Northern Ireland, in which the US and UK governments agreed to provide timely access to electronic data for authorised law enforcement purposes. The Cloud Act could compel US-based hyperscalers to provide foreign-stored data to US authorities, bypassing local laws.I want to know exactly where my data goes, how its encrypted and how quickly I can get out if needed, says Cosson, reflecting a broader industry concern that opaque data paths and limited contractual assurances can expose businesses to significant compliance risks.We use the cloud when we have to, but still run key systems on-premise for control, adds Cosson. This approach is typical of companies handling sensitive financial data. There is a lack of trust with organisations not prepared to take promises of secure cloud storage at face value.While Cosson acknowledges that cloud adoption is inevitable for some services, such as Microsoft 365, he underscores the enduring role of on-premise infrastructure for businesses that require absolute control over sensitive data. This, of course, raises an additional problem of how to manage hybrid data environments securely and efficiently.According to Cosson, companies like Nutanix play a critical role here, enabling organisations to manage workloads across cloud and on-premise environments while maintaining data control. Nutanixs infrastructure services are designed to address sovereignty concerns, he says, by ensuring businesses have clear data management policies and remain compliant with local regulations. We need coordinated efforts between government, industry and local authorities to build a resilient datacentre ecosystem. This means shared responsibility, clearer policy frameworks, and incentives for both hyperscalers and UK-based providers Luisa Cardani, TechUKThe next five years will be decisive, says Civos Boost. If transparency becomes a legal requirement, well see businesses demanding more from providers, not just about where data resides, but also how infrastructure is managed and powered.TechUKs Cardani believes public-private partnerships will play a crucial role here. We need coordinated efforts between government, industry and local authorities to build a resilient datacentre ecosystem, she says. This means shared responsibility, clearer policy frameworks, and incentives for both hyperscalers and UK-based providers.Boost and Cardani each agree that the balance of power between hyperscalers and local operators may shift, particularly if future policies mandate data localisation or prohibit cross-border data transfers without explicit guarantees. Sovereignty-by-design, where infrastructure is built to meet local compliance from the start, could become the new standard.Until that point, organisations need to work out how they can meet existing standards. Cardani argues that adherence to standards must be supported by national policies that enable transparent reporting and clear accountability structures.In practice, this means enforcing mandatory audits, data residency certifications and security benchmarks tailored to UK-specific legal frameworks. Without these measures, businesses risk falling into compliance gaps that could expose them to data breaches, fines and legal disputes.Frameworks such as ISO 27001 for information security management, General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) for data privacy and Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) for payment security set clear operational expectations. Yet these standards are only part of the equation, as evolving regulations increasingly emphasise data sovereignty and security-by-design.Ensuring that datacentres comply with such frameworks while offering sovereignty guarantees has become a pressing challenge. Hyperscalers operating across multiple jurisdictions complicate audits and compliance checks due to varying legal obligations and data transfer rules.The introduction of the CMAs investigation is urgently needed, if only to provide some clarity around what, for most buyers, has become a confusing subject.For IT leaders, the critical takeaway is that responsibility cannot be outsourced. Security, compliance and sovereignty must be actively managed through risk assessments, compliance audits and multi-supplier strategies.And as the UKs digital infrastructure evolves, only businesses that stay ahead of regulation and demand transparency from their providers will be able to navigate the uncertainties.On that score, the UKs datacentre industry stands at a crossroads but with policy clarity, local investment and industry transparency, it has the potential to become a global digital leader in this space.Its about trust and everyone playing by the same, fair rules, but from a UK perspective it is also about protecting that most valuable national asset data.At JM Finns Cosson puts it: Data sovereignty is not a buzzword, its survival.Read more stories about data regulationsHow to build an effective third-party risk assessment framework: Dont overlook the threats associated with connecting vendors and partners to internal systems. Do your due diligence and use third-party risk assessments to prevent supply chain attacks.Security in the public cloud explained a guide for IT and security admins: In this guide, IT security and industry experts share their top recommendations for protecting public cloud deployments.
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  • Google Reveals 2025s Android UpgradeDoes This Beat Your iPhone?
    www.forbes.com
    Android is catching up fastGetty ImagesDespite some recent headlines, iPhones remain safer than Androids given Apples tighter restrictions and control of its ecosystem. But Google is catching up and Samsung is moving even faster to narrow the gap. Now, a new Android upgrade for 2025 could make Androids more like iPhones than ever before but theres a twist.The upgrade news comes by way of Android Authority, which has delved into the new Android 16 Beta 1 to discover more detail on the new Advanced Protection Mode feature that was first discussed last year. This fully disables app installs from outside Play Store or other pre-installed stores, and it disables 2G.The Advanced Protection Mode is an Android settings mode that works alongside Googles Advanced Protection Program (APP). This account setting safeguards users with high visibility and sensitive information from targeted online attacks, [with] new protections automatically added to defend against today's wide range of threats.APP mandates the use of a passkey or security key to log into your Google account, flags dangerous downloads, protects web browsing and locks down access to your account. In short, it makes Android safer kind of more like iPhone.MORE FOR YOUApple has its own uber security mode, which it calls Lockdown Mode. But while Apple warns that this is an optional, extreme protection thats designed for the very few individuals who might be personally targeted by some of the most sophisticated digital threats, Google is not quite so restrictive.In contrast with Apples most people are never targeted by attacks of this nature, and so should not enable Lockdown Mode, Google says people whose accounts contain particularly valuable files or sensitive information should consider Advanced Protection, and it strongly recommends business executives to enable the mode, as well as journalists, activists and people involved in elections.Notice the difference?Almost no-one reading this needs Lockdown Mode, it really is for the sub 1% and Apple warns anyone tempted that when Lockdown Mode is enabled, your device wont function like it usually would. To reduce the attack surface that could potentially be exploited by highly targeted mercenary spyware, certain apps, websites and features will be strictly limited for security, and some experiences may not be available at all. This will make your iPhone painful to use.I have warned before that despite headlines suggesting Lockdown Mode is simply an extra security setting, its not. Unless youre in one of those highly sensitive roles or have reason to fear nation-state level attacks, you dont need this. It will remove attachments, restrict web browsing, and even block shared photo albums.Googles APP has more mass appeal especially to business users, because the risks on Android are greater than the risks on iPhone. This new mode is something of a leveler. Passkey access, restricting account data, and blocking sideloading are all sensible measures. And theyre all areas where iPhones are safer than Androids.Android 15 is an exceptional update when it comes to security and privacy, and it looks like Android 16 will bring more of the same. Thats very welcome. The other theme here is the appeal to enterprises, to assure that Android can be locked down. Cue Samsung and its 25 reasons to switch appeal to iPhone users. The enhanced levels of corporate control and device lockdowns are central to this.And so while my advice to almost all iPhone users is not to enable Lockdown Mode, my advice to Android users is likely to be that they enable Advanced Protection Mode as and when its available subject to the final small print, of course.
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  • Red Hat: A Solution Means Eminently Adaptable Software
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    GOA, INDIA - FEBRUARY 28: Foreign tourists and travelers learn yoga on the beach on February 27, ... [+] 2006 in Arambol, Goa, India. The tiny Indian state became known as a hippie heaven in the 1960's and its beaches have hosted all night parties for adventurous backpacking tourists ever since. (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)Getty ImagesDisks are dead. To be clear, this comment is in no way related to the still-functioning hard disks inside your laptop (or desktop) machine, the industrious blade server disks located in datacenters around the globe that provide us all with the power of always-on computing and the cloud, or indeed the USBs and hard disk extensions that most of use for backup and additional memory.But disks as we once knew them are a thing of the past if we consider how used to install Windows 98 on over 30 pre-formatted 3.5-inch floppy disks, with Microsoft Office also requiring almost 20 disks. As we moved through the age of the CD-ROM into the nineties and the naughties, we started to enjoy more ubiquitous connection to the world wide web (as the Internet was once known) and users started to appreciate the need for continously composed patches, updates and downloads.What that brief history of desktop computing allows us to realize today is that data engineering has moved beyond its traditional roots i.e. its no longer just about building static pipelines to move and transform data its about designing adaptable systems that thrive in a complex world.In other words, when we talk about software solutions - that oft-hackneyed and over-user term that the IT industry loves to use - what we really means is: software that can change, morph, grow, extend and adapt.The Age Of AdaptabilityToday we know that workloads evolve, technologies shift and data sprawls across hybrid and multi-cloud environments. In this context, while scale is still vital, adaptability has overtaken it as the key driver of success for modern data systems, explained Erica Langhi, associate principal solution architect, Red Hat. For data engineers, this means rethinking how pipelines are made. They must no longer function simply as static workflows, but become real-time, modular and productized systems designed to adapt and consistently deliver value to their consumers.Langhi and team of course base their opinions on the open source DNA that beats at the heart of Red Hat which has now (very arguably, given the widespread embrace of open systems architecture by previously proprietaryonly protagonists) proven itself to be among them more manageably malleable ways to create enterprise software applications for the post-Covid things could disrupt any moment world we now live in.As such, she reminds us that open source technologies and hybrid cloud architectures provide the essential building blocks for the evolved systems that we need today. But, without thoughtful data engineering practices that prioritize usability, collaboration, lifecycle management and adaptability, even the best tools risk becoming just another layer of complexity. What this truth leads us to is a need to think about our enterprise data and its full-flowing pipeline as a product that we use in a more agile way.Data Pipelines As ProductsTraditional data pipelines were designed for linear workflows: they ingested, processed and delivered data outputs. While sufficient for the static environments of the past, this model falls short in addressing modern, dynamic use cases demands. Treating data pipelines as products flips this approach on its head, said Langhi. Productized pipelines are built as modular components, each handling specific functions like data ingestion or enrichment. These components can be updated, replaced or scaled independently, making the pipeline adaptable to changing requirements.For instance, she explains, when a new data format or source is introduced, only the relevant module needs adjustment, minimising disruption and downtime.Versioning each iteration of the pipeline ensures downstream consumers, like AI models or analytics dashboards, can trace data lineage and access accurate datasets. This supports auditing, compliance and confidence in the data. Strong governance practices further enhance these pipelines by ensuring data quality and consistency. If data is oil, metadata is gold: a vital resource for ensuring traceability and unlocking actionable insights.Lets consider what this could look like in a healthcare context. A productized pipeline might automate the ingestion and anonymisation of patient imaging data from edge devices. It could enrich the data in real-time, add metadata for regulatory compliance and make information immediately accessible to researchers or AI diagnostic models. Unlike traditional pipelines, the system would evolve to handle new data sources, scale with growing patient data and integrate emerging tools for advanced analysis, clarified Red Hats Langhi.Breaking Down SilosFor data pipelines to function as adaptable products, the Red Hat team are adamant that they must break free from silos. Data locked within department-specific systems or proprietary platforms leads to rigid workflows. This makes it nearly impossible to create pipelines that deliver value across an organisation.Open source is widely agreed to helps with this. Pipelines built with open source can harness community expertise to provide a shared, reusable foundation. This empowers users to design pipelines that are portable, interoperable and adaptable to new tools and evolving business needs.Open source data pipelines provide the flexibility needed to bridge hybrid cloud environments by combining data from on-premise systems and private and public cloud platforms into unified workflows, without requiring major re-architecture. Take Kafka: an open source data streaming pipeline, it can accelerate data delivery, enable real-time insights, provide regulatory compliance and support AI use cases, regardless of the data's origin. Kafka benefits from continuous growth and optimization through open collaboration with innovators, said Langhi. As workloads evolve and expand, combining technologies like Kafka and Kubernetes enables the development of scalable, reliable and highly available data pipelines, essential for machine learning applications. New tools can be added, workloads can be shifted across environments and processes can evolve with minimal disruption.AI Needs Quality DataOne of the most transformative applications of modern data engineering is in artificial intelligence. AIs value lies in its ability to turn data into insights. But this is only possible if the data itself is prepared to meet AI models demands. Raw data, in its unstructured and inconsistent form, holds little value until it is transformed into a usable state. This is where data engineering plays a key role, bridging the gap between raw inputs and the refined, enriched datasets that fuel AI.As AI adoption grows, data engineers are tasked with managing the ever-increasing volume, variety and velocity of data. Its no longer enough to simply collect and store information; data must be accessible, trustworthy and ready to use in real time. The evolving role of data engineers reflects this complexity. They now focus on building pipelines that deliver high-quality data for fine-tuning models, handle real-time streaming from edge devices, and adapt seamlessly to new tools and requirements, concluded Langhi.Talking about the future of data engineering, Langhi feels strongly that we need to realize how important it is to talk about cultivating systems that thrive in uncertainty and deliver real, ongoing value. As the data landscape grows more complex, the true measure of success will be the ability to adapt, iterate and deliver quality outputs.
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