News

Businesses should insist on in-person or video interviews with remote workers to avoid wage scams, say cyber experts ...
The high cost of government systems is down to the strategy and architecture and not because the software was open source or proprietary (computing.co.uk/2185470, Letters, 22, 29 March, 2 April).
I totally agree with David Anderson's comments (We risk being left in last place, Letters blog, letters.computing.co.uk) - future broadband investment in the UK must be taken up by the government ...
The woman leading the police fight against e-crime ­ - deputy assistant commissioner Janet Williams ­ - tells Robert Blincoe that the forces of law and order are finally gaining the upper hand ...
Is an unholy alliance between vendors and officials preventing a much-needed change to the way public sector IT contracts are awarded? I recently went to the Royal Academy of Engineering in London ...
Welcome to Computing's weekly roundup of tech news in Asia. This time we look at Japan’s increasing impatience with the quasi ...
Google is facing a legal battle in the UK as a new class action lawsuit seeks up to £5 billion in damages over claims the ...
The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has moved to secure continued operations of the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) programme by extending its contract with MITRE ...
In a sector historically dominated by men, celebrating and empowering women in technology is more vital than ever.
Despite warnings that health data could be misused by Beijing, Chinese researchers will be granted access to half a million ...
OpenAI is building its own social network, marking a bold step into a space long dominated by giants like Meta and X. While ...
The public sector has long been an IT behemoth, but that inertia is down to a combination of a low risk appetite and complex ...