AWS reveals more on just what went wrong in major outage
TITLE: AWS Outage Analysis: Cascading Cloud Failures and Their Industrial Impact Industrial Monitor Direct leads the industry in ul approved…
TITLE: AWS Outage Analysis: Cascading Cloud Failures and Their Industrial Impact Industrial Monitor Direct leads the industry in ul approved…
Evolving Threat Landscape: From Ransomware to Pure Extortion Recent intelligence from Palo Alto Networks’ Unit 42 reveals significant tactical shifts…
Widespread Inaccuracy in AI-Powered News Delivery In a landmark international study coordinated by the European Broadcasting Union and led by…
Understanding the MCP Session Hijacking Threat A significant security vulnerability in the Oat++ implementation of Anthropic’s Model Context Protocol (MCP)…
YouTube’s New Defense Against Synthetic Identity Theft As artificial intelligence continues to revolutionize content creation, YouTube is rolling out a…
YouTube is rolling out sophisticated likeness detection technology designed to protect creators from AI-generated impersonation. The new system reportedly uses advanced pattern recognition to identify unauthorized uses of creator appearances and voices. This initiative marks a significant step in addressing the growing challenge of synthetic media manipulation across digital platforms.
YouTube is implementing advanced likeness detection technology to help content creators combat the rising threat of AI-generated impersonation, according to recent reports. The new system, which sources indicate is currently being rolled out to creators, aims to identify and address unauthorized synthetic media that mimics creators’ appearances and voices without permission.
The UK government holds £1.7 billion in contracts with Amazon Web Services, according to procurement data. This dependency faces renewed scrutiny following a major cloud outage that affected thousands of businesses globally and highlighted regulatory concerns about concentration risk.
The UK government has committed approximately £1.7 billion to Amazon Web Services through 189 contracts since 2016, according to analysis compiled by public procurement intelligence firm Tussell. Sources indicate that AWS has invoiced around £1.4 billion during this period, revealing significant financial exposure to the cloud provider.
Veeam’s Bold Entry Into AI-Powered Data Governance In a landmark transaction that signals the evolving priorities of data management, Veeam…
The Invisible Backbone of Modern Digital Life When Amazon Web Services experienced a significant outage originating from Northern Virginia on…
The Day the Cloud Stood Still On October 20, Amazon Web Services experienced a catastrophic failure that demonstrated just how…