Tracking the path of the internet revolution
Alongside the technology sector’s many benefits have come new and insidious threats, damages and dangers
Karlin Lillington columns
Alongside the technology sector’s many benefits have come new and insidious threats, damages and dangers
Incoming US president will not be all the tech industry is hoping for once he is in power
UK consumer protection advocates Which? found that certain air fryers gather personal data that has little or no relevance to the functioning of the product
Reconciling the GDPR with the AI Act poses issues, but I think they are minor compared to the hard problem of making the new safety code work in any realistic way
No other minister would have had the interest, much less stubbornness, to push through the first undersea fibreoptic cable deal
Scepticism is justified as these days the online variety is the one almost certain to be wearing the data dunce cap
The €13bn tax case, while unwelcome, always related to times long past with no real impact for any of the players going forward
If Elon Musk has hurt his car company’s brand, it’s not showing yet
Legislators are struggling to balance protection on the one hand and with the need to avoid disproportionate restriction on the other
Intel’s struggles, doubts over potential of AI and Google’s humbling in federal antitrust suit all point to a potential inflection point for the sector
Facts and truth can be fluid both in the world of the bitcoin bros and the former president Trump
We have yet to be given clear reasons why we need facial recognition technology even though a Bill relating to it is meandering through our political process
Too many vested interests have undermined the effectiveness of the EU’s key data protection law
Step intended to combat child sexual abuse online has been widely condemned as ineffective and in breach of fundamental rights
When the US president Bill Clinton used Baltimore Technologies ‘strong encryption’ service, it opened the way to much wider use of the technology
Finland’s Eurovision Song Contest entry Windows95man′s hard drive issues entertain
Passkeys are more secure but tech firms are doing little to encourage us to use them
Tech giant firing staff for political protest is among the biggest lobbyists of government and not averse to very ‘political’ business
US intelligence agencies raise flags over WuXi and its links with Chinese government and national security
Filterworld by Kyle Chayka; Code Dependent by Madhumita Murgia
Plans for air taxis are either impractical or likely to be prohibitively expensive for all but the very rich, or both
Donald Trump’s social media network is trading at valuations that make some of the most successful listed businesses in history look pedestrian
Silicon Valley has not changed that much since Mike Lynch was in his pomp
Watered down legislation still puts Europe ahead on regulating AI but enforcement could be held back by technological gaps
While other firms have been caught in the bloc’s regulatory crosshairs, the iPhone maker had broadly escaped until now
Ireland has an opportunity to be the Digital Services Act’s model regulator. But some chances have already been squandered
Though generally targeting enthusiasts on personal laptops, the operating system dominates the enterprise market
We need to prevent our online future from concentrating further into the hands of a few billionaires and their mega-companies
Current technology won’t accomplish Coimisiún na Meán’s ‘gold standard’ proposals to verify users accessing inappropriate internet content
Karlin Lillington: The strange hybrid Coimisiún na Meán faces great challenges and one mooted porn registry idea is mega-scale bonkers
Apple’s Mac has been around since 1984, and is still getting better
My generation didn’t grow up with games involving microchips, a likely factor. And I was like a lot of girls and women in disliking the majority of titles
EU and other regulators must realise that fines by themselves are no deterrent to X and other firms
Tech advances are nearing a crisis point, with big implications for how we live our day-to-day lives
Dare to use a toll road or cross a bridge in a rental car in California or Illinois, and you are on the highway to hell
In the current AI regulatory vacuum, an enormous balance of AI power seems to be tilting towards Microsoft
Karlin Lillington: US expert argues for tighter controls and end lax containment efforts
One whistleblower’s experience of official Ireland does not bode well for protected disclosures generally
Head bowed low in apology, the timeless Silver Swan continues to inspire as that enchanting example of precision engineering, creativity and robotics
Condemning governments on human rights grounds while running event filled with companies that enable serious abuses smacks of hypocrisy
The US Justice Department’s antitrust trial against Google will, whatever the outcome, influence the future of technology in ways we cannot yet imagine
Karlin Lillington: Data breach at 23andMe highlights need for regulation as genetic background and other information hacked and offered for sale
Using an eSim is straightforward overseas, it should be the same in Ireland
State controversially funded private sector initiative to leverage DNA samples from Irish people for profit
Many of its operational cogs and wheels run behind the scenes, meaning you probably didn’t notice anything
Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland has, in some cases, recovered more than 85% of destroyed archive collections but gaps remain
Media need to focus on what’s happening at Twitter and Meta, not a ludicrous fight that was never likely to happen
Ireland will be a key player in regulation but setting rules requires unsettling levels of guess-making about how AI technologies might affect us
The fediverse has been trumpeted as a way to break the dominance of the social networking giants. Can it succeed?
‘Those rump members left on Musk’s comic book X-world should probably start thinking about alternatives'
Apple products were renowned for being user-friendly, but that's no longer the case
That so many people are so willing to opt for more Meta says much about how ghastly Twitter has become
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices