Public Internet stories
Taboola launches DeeperDive, an AI answer engine on publisher sites, helping monetise content and boost user engagement amid rising AI search challenges.
Cloudflare's Project Galileo, which offers free DDoS protection, marks its 10th anniversary, supporting over 2,600 public interest groups globally.
DataStax and Amazon Web Services join forces to accelerate the delivery of progressive generative AI solutions.
The combination will reduce provisioning time to minutes, enabling companies to adjust the bandwidth to meet their fluctuating needs.
The global tech community is addressing the environmental impact of video traffic on networks, according to Philippe Wetzel, CEO of VITEC.
The country code top-level domain of Aotearoa New Zealand - .nz - is now powered by the registry solution based on the CIRA Registry Platform.
Startling findings from Equinix reveal bandwidth used in private data exchange between businesses to be 6x that of the public internet by 2020.
Global internet users set to hit 2 billion by 2011 as ITU reports a surge in online access, particularly in developing countries.
Nearly a third of New Zealand schools have now received N4L's next-generation Managed Network upgrades.
Federal and provincial governments pledge 77m to extend high-speed internet to 6,900 rural and Indigenous homes across British Columbia.
auDA awards $2.5 million for projects at Deakin and Monash universities to secure DNS against quantum threats and aid scam-vulnerable Australians.
The upcoming site will introduce Canadian-developed, slow-growth social media to the world upon its launch later this year.
A new survey by Console Connect highlights that rapid adoption of generative AI could strain existing infrastructure, with Australian firms facing the most concern.
Expereo launches Enhanced Internet, the world's first AI-driven solution designed to improve internet application performance worldwide, with claims the new technology can reduce web traffic latency by up to 85%, eliminating packet loss entirely.
Kiwis are surprisingly unaware of the risks involved in using public WiFi, according to a study by Norton and Symantec.