EZINE:
Imperial College London is embarking on a three-year project with an Abu Dhabi-based group of researchers to find ways for datacentre operators and cloud providers to secure their infrastructure. Also read how Dubai is positioning itself to reap the benefits of a promising global market for drone technology.
RESEARCH CONTENT:
For this article in our Royal Holloway security series, the authors provide a brief overview of multiparty computation (MPC) and highlight the benefits of MPC-based bitcoin custody over traditional approaches.
RESEARCH CONTENT:
This article introduces connected and autonomous vehicles, analysing the underlying technologies and considering their cyber security vulnerabilities and attacks. We identify and assess the existing and emerging countermeasures for such vulnerabilities, and propose high-level recommendations.
EZINE:
One Dutch tech firm has used learnings from the pandemic to rip up its HR rule book and implement an official work-from-home policy. In fact, Infolearn has gone further than hybrid working, with a personal mobility budget for staff and a four-day working week.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we detail the concerns of IT experts about the UK's Online Safety Bill's proposals to weaken end-to-end message encryption. Our buyer's guide continues to look at the issues around integrating SaaS applications, with a particular eye to the proliferation of SaaS during the Covid pandemic. Read the issue now.
EGUIDE:
As Biden sets out his agenda for the next four years, the Computer Weekly Security Think Tank considers the opportunities for renewed international collaboration on cyber security, what aspects of cyber policy Biden would be best advised to focus on, and asks how the industry can better make its voice heard.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we examine how LLMs are being used to teach, support and assess students, enhancing education rather than impairing it. We look at how AI is impacting the semiconductor sector as big tech companies put off server upgrades. And we find out how GenAI is changing the way enterprise software works. Read the issue now.