News

Geedge Networks, a company with ties to the founder of China’s mass censorship infrastructure, is selling its censorship and surveillance systems to at least four other countries in Asia and Africa.
Around the world, defibrillators, motorbikes, and water towers are being donated, sold, or simply abandoned.
On September 11, a huge breach exposed the inner workings of China’s powerful internet censorship system. More than 500GB of ...
Vision Invest invests $700m in Arise IIP, Africa’s largest private infrastructure deal in 2025. Arise IIP fundraising hits $1.25bn in 2025, with Afreximbank and African Development Bank among key ...
Ethiopia has built a national emergency medical team and hosts Africa's first World Health Organization (WHO)-certified regional training hub. It offers a robust, African-led model for strengthening ...
President Trump threatened major broadcast networks in a string of social media posts late Sunday, suggesting they be fined or taken off the air due to their polling and coverage of his administration ...
ESPN and Fox aren’t the only media companies trying to reach an emerging generation of sports fans who are more at home in digital realms then they are traditional ones. Yahoo Sports is launching a ...
Hot Chips, a leading semiconductor design conference taking place Aug. 24–26 at Stanford University, will feature Nvidia's latest innovations in rack-scale AI systems, neural rendering and ...
Verily, Google's life sciences sister company, has laid off staff and cut its devices program. In a memo to staff, CEO Stephen Gillett said Verily was continuing to narrow its focus. "The path forward ...
Who is the Master's in Data Science for? Drexel’s College of Computing & Informatics' Master of Science in Data Science (MSDS) is designed for students with or without a bachelor’s degree in Data ...
Note: This article first appeared in the Spring 2025 issue of Army Communica­tor. In March of 2024, U.S. Army Forces Command (FORSCOM) Headquarters (HQ) tasked the 1st Infantry Division (1ID) ...
In 1977, scientists discovered a mysterious signal beaming from space that was so powerful it prompted astronomer Jerry Ehman to write 'Wow!' on the telescope's readout. For decades, scientists have ...