Regulating the Internet of Things - the Government defence This article is sponsored by:
In response to the opposition’s view that not enough is being done to regulate the Internet of Things, Stuart Lauchlan reports on the government’s defence.
In response to the opposition’s view that not enough is being done to regulate the Internet of Things, Stuart Lauchlan reports on the government’s defence.
Chris Middleton explores how the cyber-security sector should be looking to underrepresented groups to help bridge the UK’s cyber security skills gap.
The European Commission e-government benchmarking report shows that lots of people use online government services in the UK, but those services fail to be fully digitised.
Australia’s Digital Transformation Agency notes that the current Cloud Services Panel - which hosts over 500 cloud services - will expire in 2020.
techUK urges Sajid Javid to move away from the UK's plans to go it alone on Digital Services Tax.
Mike Bracken is back with some uncomfortable truths for his successors in government digital transformation.
The advent of the G-Cloud and a stricter procurement policy sought to break up the original Oligopoly a decade ago. But do the same rules apply to Oligopoly 2.0?
There is going to be a powerful new digital leader in Whitehall. But what will their remit be? Who will they be overseeing? And who might be the best person for the job?
The Prime Minister gives a cringe-worthy performance regarding the future opportunities for the tech industry in Britain. Unfortunately, they were all a bit pie in the sky...
Alex Osborne, Senior Director at ServiceNow, discusses the opportunities presented by the government’s new innovation framework, Spark. The key to success will be tackling integration and a platform approach.
Whilst the media obsesses over how robots are coming for all of our jobs, a new government-backed report claims that we actually have too few robots in the workplace.
Alison Pritchard, the interim director general of GDS, says government has end goals in mind for five key pillars.
Reports that claimed data could be scooped up from GOV.UK to help the Prime Minister’s campaign is not true, say GDS and civil service bosses