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5G and Open RAN are some networking technologies they highlighted. "5G networks will enable automated guided vehicles, port and airfield operations, and cutting-edge telemedicine such as remote access to specialists and rapid creation of field hospitals," Ramirez said. "So looking at this from the perspective of how do we actually manipulate these systems internally, we've gone 100% in on Open RAN as our solution. We have a perspective of how Open RAN is the basis for taking advantage of these technologies and pushing us into the 6G era." The Department of Defense is working with academic and industry leaders on Open RAN to bring its communications systems into a new era, he said.
Persons: , It's, Venice Goodwine, that's, Goodwine, Juan Ramirez, Ramirez, Tom Rondeau, Rondeau, we've Organizations: MWC Las Vegas, RAN, Service, MWC, Vegas, Radio Access, Department of, Air Force, Air, Department of Defense, Department Locations: Venice
Airports are looking to private wireless networks to improve operations, execs said at MWC Las Vegas. Private wireless networks are key to ushering in a better airport experience for both the travel hubs' operations and the billions of passengers who pass through them. Private networks generally offer greater security and reliability, lower latency, and higher bandwidth compared with public networks. "As I think about a future with a lot of growth, private wireless is foundational. Private wireless networks can also help enterprises with cost and mobility by reducing the expense of installing cables and by providing connectivity to areas that might be harder to reach with wires.
Persons: execs, , Charles Miwa, Michael Youngs, We're, Kyle Mobley, Mobley, that's, SITA, I'm, Youngs, That's Organizations: MWC Las Vegas, Service, Mobile, Congress, Vegas, International Airport, Dallas Fort Worth International, Private, Port, San, San Francisco Bay, International, Airports Locations: Vegas ., Port of Oakland, San Francisco
Read previewIf Qualcomm sees it through, its takeover bid of Intel would likely be the biggest in Silicon Valley history. The possibility of Intel handing its 56-year history over to a younger rival emerged last week after several reports said that California-based semiconductor firm Qualcomm had made a takeover approach. That said, not everyone is convinced that Qualcomm needs Intel — or that a buyout would be a good idea for either company. My industry survey also indicates that Qualcomm is currently in takeover talks with Intel. A Qualcomm bid for Intel could face similar regulatory obstacles to the takeover attempt Nvidia made for Arm in 2020 and later abandoned in 2022.
Persons: , Qualcomm's, Pat Gelsinger, Patrick Moorhead, Richard Windsor, Chi Kuo, , Qualcomm Organizations: Service, Qualcomm, Intel, Business, Nvidia, Financial Times, CNBC, Amazon Web, Intel Foundry, Radio Free Mobile, International Securities, Microsoft, Bloomberg Locations: Silicon Valley, California, Europe, Taiwan
Among the offers at AT & T for new and existing customers: a free iPhone 16 or up to $830 off the iPhone 16 Plus if they meet a few eligibility requirements. Apple's list price for the Phone 16 and iPhone 16 Plus start at $799 and $899, respectively. Now consider that despite inflation, Apple left the prices of iPhone 16 models the same as the prior generation while adding AI capabilities and improved battery life, among others. "All of these things will be incremental, just enough to eventually convince millions" to upgrade their devices, Jim said. Apple CEO Tim Cook delivers remarks before the start of an Apple event at Apple headquarters on September 09, 2024 in Cupertino, California.
Persons: , Max, Jim Cramer, Tim Cook, Cook, Bernstein, John Stankey, Stankey, aren't, Jim, Jeff Marks, Jim Cramer's, Justin Sullivan Organizations: Verizon, Mobile, Apple, Consumer Intelligence Research Partners, UBS, CNBC, Club, Markets, Apple Intelligence, Barclays Locations: U.S, China, Europe, Cupertino , California
Learn moreAmazon Prime Day, which is in its final stretch today, has brought many of our favorite tech, beauty, and home products to all-time-low prices. We check every deal against our tested guides and price tracking to make sure you're getting the best products for the lowest cost, optimizing your Prime Day experience. As more of Business Insider's top-rated products and brands go on sale during Prime Day, we'll continue to update this page with new discounts. If you're looking for a solid Android tablet, this is an excellent option, especially at its lowest price ever for Prime Day. Check out our roundup of all of the best Prime Day deals, or browse Amazon's website for more.
Persons: it's, we'll, MagSafe, Max, , Gabrielle Chase, , Herschel, Eero Organizations: Business, Samsung, Amazon, Kindle, Apple, Herschel Supply, Amazon Samsung, Amazon LG, LG, Adidas, Alexa, Amazon Prime
AT&T says hackers stole call and text records from "nearly all" of its wireless customers. The data includes the phone numbers that customers interacted with. It doesn't include the contents of the calls and texts, or Social Security numbers, AT&T said. AdvertisementAT&T says that call and text records from almost all of its wireless customers were stolen in a hack earlier this year. The compromised data includes files containing AT&T records of calls and texts of "nearly all of AT&T's cellular customers, customers of mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) using AT&T's wireless network, as well as AT&T's landline customers who interacted with those cellular numbers between May 1, 2022 - October 31, 2022."
Persons: Organizations: Service, Business
A pedestrian walks by a sign posted in front of an AT&T store on June 20, 2023 in San Francisco, California. Hackers stole six months' worth of call and text message records of nearly every AT&T cellular network customer, the company said Friday. The data contains records of calls and texts between approximately May 1 and Oct. 31, 2022, and on Jan. 2, 2023. The content of the calls and messages was not compromised and customers' personal information was not accessed — but the records did include phone numbers. The company sought to assure customers that, at least as of Friday, "AT&T does not believe that the data is publicly available."
Organizations: SEC, U.S . Justice Department Locations: San Francisco , California
New York CNN —If you were an AT&T cellphone customer in 2022, your call data was possibly breached to bad actors. AT&T said Friday that data was breached from “nearly all” of its cellular customers and the customers of wireless providers that used its network between May 1, 2022, and October 31, 2022. The records of a “very small number” of customers from January 2, 2023, were also breached, AT&T said. What they did get is metadata — call logs that contain a record of every number AT&T customers called or texted (including customers of other wireless networks), the number of times they interacted and the call duration. The age of artificial intelligence makes this even more pressing, according to Collin Walke, cybersecurity and data privacy partner at Hall Estill.
Persons: , John Dwyer, Collin Walke, ” Walke, Walke, Dwyer, ” Dwyer, ” Eric Noonan, CyberSheath, CNN’s Matt Egan, Sean Lyngaas Organizations: New, New York CNN, Bank of America, Binary Defense, Hall Locations: New York, ,
A cyberattack on the telecommunications giant AT&T exposed data from “nearly all” of its customers and downloaded it to a third-party cloud platform, AT&T said on Friday. “We have taken steps to close off the illegal access point,” AT&T said in a statement. The company said it was working with law enforcement to arrest those involved, and that at least one person had been apprehended. The compromised data included files containing AT&T records of calls and texts from cellular customers, wireless network customers and landline customers between May 2022 and October 2022, and records from Jan. 2, 2023, for a small number of customers, the company said. While the data does not include customer names, it is often possible to link a name to a phone number using online searches.
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London/Berlin CNN —Germany will phase out components made by China’s Huawei and ZTE from its 5G wireless network over the next five years, a move that risks worsening its already strained relations with the world’s second-largest economy. By the end of 2029, these components must also be purged from “access and transport networks,” which include the physical parts of the 5G network such as transmission lines and towers. Last week, Berlin blocked the sale of a Volkswagen subsidiary to a Chinese state-owned company on national security grounds, drawing a rebuke from Beijing. China is also locked in a trade spat with the European Union, which hiked tariffs on Chinese electric cars last month. The US also placed Huawei on a trade restriction list in 2019, which made it harder for the company to obtain semiconductor chips from American suppliers.
Persons: China’s, Nancy Faeser, Organizations: Berlin CNN —, China’s Huawei, ZTE, Mobile, Vodafone, Deutsche Telekom, Telefonica, CNN, Huawei, Volkswagen, European Union, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs Locations: Berlin, Berlin CNN — Germany, Germany, China, Beijing, United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Japan, Europe, East, Africa
CNN —AT&T’s second prolonged outage so far this year left customers irate on Tuesday, with experts criticizing the company’s response and saying the wireless company risked losing user loyalty over the issues. Because of the problem connecting to other carriers, thousands of Verizon customers also reported a service outage on Down Detector Tuesday. In a statement Tuesday, AT&T said it had resolved the outage and that calls between AT&T customers were not impacted. Tens of thousands of AT&T customers in America could not make phone calls, send texts, reach emergency services or access the internet. After two consecutive outages and a March data breach, North said AT&T needs to work to regain customer trust.
Persons: , Mojtaba, ” Vaezi, Karen North Organizations: CNN —, Verizon, Wireless, Laboratory, Villanova University, CNN, University of Southern, & & Locations: New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia, Dallas, Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, America, University of Southern California, Camden County , Georgia, Scranton , Pennsylvania
NOAA’s severe space weather watch suggests the storm could trigger numerous effects for life on Earth, possibly affecting the power grid as well as satellite and high frequency radio communications. Moreover, the changes to the ionosphere can block or degrade radio transmissions trying to pass through the atmosphere to reach satellites. And they can also prevent radio transmissions from successfully bouncing off the ionosphere — which some radio operators normally do to increase the range of their signals. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency outlined a similar report in a 2021 presentation on space weather, finding that line-of-sight radio transmissions are generally not affected by space weather except in specific situations. The largest known geomagnetic storm in history, known as the Carrington Event of 1859, caused telegraph stations to spark and catch fire.
Persons: Washington CNN — Buckle, “ SWPC, Ashley Strickland Organizations: Washington CNN, Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, Communications, NOAA, Prediction, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Infrastructure Security Agency Locations: Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, China, Quebec, Canada, Sweden, South Africa
European Union regulators on Monday threatened to fine TikTok over potentially addictive features on a version of its app called TikTok Lite, which was released to work more smoothly on slower wireless networks. investigation adds to TikTok’s regulatory challenges as the U.S. Senate prepares to vote on a bill that would order the app’s owner, the Chinese internet company ByteDance, to sell TikTok or be banned. The company is under growing pressure for its links to China, data collection practices and potentially harmful effects on children. They said the features created a financial incentive to spend more time on the app, creating risks for addiction and mental health issues, particularly for children. investigation against TikTok, along with another inquiry focused on a lack of effective age-verification protections and addictive design features.
Persons: TikTok Organizations: U.S, Senate, TikTok Locations: China, Europe
Despite laying off full-time staff earlier this year, Snap has open roles in areas including engineering, sales, and marketing. On April 12, Snap had globally listed 142 open positions on its jobs board, including 88 openings in US cities. Related storiesMany of Snap's applications included annual salary ranges rather than a single salary for a given role. For example, Snap included a pay rate of $97,760 and $140,000 a year for one software engineer position. In cases where Snap submitted multiple applications for a particular job, such as a level III software engineer, we included the lowest and highest salary for the role as well as the median range.
Persons: Dan Whateley Organizations: Stars, Advertising Research Center, Business, US, of Foreign Labor, Department of Labor, Inc, Santa, Research, Data, Analytics, CRM Technology, Finance Technology, IT Corp Services, Learning, Partner, Engineering, Security Engineering, Software, Software Engineering, Oracle Systems, Assurance, iOS, Wireless Network, Global, Lens, Advisory Partners, Corporate, Corporate Finance, Strategic Locations: Santa Monica, Seattle, View, Palo Alto , New York, San Francisco
CNN —As darkness envelops millions of people during Monday’s total solar eclipse, spectators will hold their cellphones skyward to capture the moment. A family looks through a pair of giant solar eclipse glasses at Veterans Memorial Park in Dripping Springs, Texas, on April 4, 2024. When the last total solar eclipse cut a path across America in 2017, AT&T reported network usage spikes up to 15% around certain cell towers in the path of totality. People view the solar eclipse at 'Top of the Rock' observatory at Rockefeller Center, August 21, 2017 in New York City. “A total eclipse of the sun is unlike any other experience that a human being can have.
Persons: Adam Davis, Shutterstock, , Caty Pilachowski, ” Pilachowski, Drew Angerer, Chris Serico, Serico, ” Serico, it’s, ” Verizon’s Serico, Heather Groll, ” Groll, Michelle Eng, Pichnaieu Chung, Anthony Behar, Lisa Winter, Winter, Rick Dietz, Aaron Sadler, Pilachowski, Organizations: CNN, Veterans Memorial, Indiana University , Bloomington, Bloomington, Rockefeller Center, Verizon, 5G, New York State Division of Homeland Security, Emergency Services, , New, MTA, Hall, AP, NASA, Technology Services Department Locations: Texas, Maine, Springs, Texas , Oklahoma , Arkansas , Missouri , Tennessee , Illinois , Kentucky , Indiana , Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania, New York , Vermont , New Hampshire , Maine, Mexico, Canada, America, New York City, Niagara, Erie, New York, Northeast Ohio, Dallas, United States, Buffalo , NY, Rochester , NY, Hall , New York, NY, Rock , Arkansas, Little
The company didn’t publicly acknowledge the outage until it first posted on its site about the outage at 11:15 am ET. Reports on outage tracking service Downdetector showed the network initially went down more than seven hours earlier: Reyes said he experienced the outage starting at 3:50 am ET. AT&T posted just once on X about the outage, pointing customers seeking more information to a faulty link. For many AT&T customers, the network outage was far more than an inconvenience. A "No Service" message is seen on an iPhone in Atlanta during an AT&T outage on February 22.
Persons: CNN —, Damián Reyes, , , I’m, Reyes, Uber, didn’t, Reyes ’, ” Reyes, Mojtaba, John Breyault, Brook Joyner, CNN Breyault, Catherine Thorbecke, Clare Duffy Organizations: CNN, Mobile, T’s Twitter, Villanova University, Wireless Networking Laboratory, National Consumers League, San Francisco’s Department of Emergency Management Locations: Jacksonville , Florida, Atlanta
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A GOP legislative effort to prevent Virginia children from using the popular video-sharing app TikTok — an idea backed by Republican Gov. Jay Leftwich of Chesapeake, was left in a House of Delegates committee after concerns were raised about how the ban would be enforced. Leftwich also said he brought the bill out of mental health and data privacy concerns for young people. “But I will not be supporting this bill because I think it’s unfair to single out TikTok,” she said. “We’ve long said bans, like the one proposed in this legislation, are not only the wrong approach, but also raise significant First Amendment concerns," Brown said.
Persons: Glenn Youngkin —, Republican Del, Jay Leftwich, Lawmakers, Youngkin, Leftwich, , , Holly Seibold, Jamal Brown, We’ve, Brown, Macaulay Porter, Organizations: , Republican Gov, Democratic, Republican, Inc, Commonwealth, TikTok Locations: RICHMOND, Va, Virginia, Chesapeake, Fairfax County, Commonwealth
Wearable technology has been used in multiple industries, such as healthcare and fitness. Fewer lags and faster download speeds make the real-time experience required for wearable technology possible. The primary purpose of the wearables, she said, is to help those who are deaf or hard of hearing experience music inclusively. The Vibrotextile wearable technology is a haptic vest with wrist and ankle bands. "People want to be connected, and I think that's the most important aspect of technology," Rosella said.
Persons: , Jill Stark, Stark, Jeffrey Stark, Jill Stark Stark, Francesca Rosella, Rosella, CuteCircuit, Stark —, SoundShirts, Cooper Hewitt, Don Emmert, Rachel Arfa, Daniel Belquer, Belquer Organizations: Service, Lyric Opera of Chicago, Fortune Business, Lyric Opera, Smithsonian Design, Getty, Chicago Lyric Opera, Chicago Mayor's, People, Labs, 5G Locations: London, New York City, AFP
Hidden cameras are being found in hotel rooms, house rentals, cruise ships, and even airplane bathrooms, leaving many travelers to wonder: "Could a hidden camera be watching me?" It's no wonder why websites, from YouTube to TikTok, are filled with videos of people recommending simple ways to find hidden cameras. They then connected the hidden cameras to that network, bypassing the home's main network. Tjia said most hidden cameras are made in China, where, ironically, they are banned. Resembling binoculars, it also accentuates light that is reflected from a camera lens.
Persons: Pieter Tjia, Tjia, Victor Loh, Victor, Victor didn't Organizations: Amazon, Walmart, OMG Solutions, YouTube, CNBC Locations: Singapore, China
Still, legacy media companies including Disney, Paramount Global, Warner Bros. Since the "Great Netflix Correction" of 2022, there isn't a unifying growth narrative for media and entertainment companies. Disney, Paramount Global and NBCUniversal have all pegged 2025 as their flagship streaming services' first full year of profitability. Beyond financial metrics, several executives privately acknowledged morale has become an increasing concern at legacy media companies. One executive noted he's increasingly hearing from peers that running media and entertainment companies just isn't as fun as it was five or 10 years ago.
Persons: Corey Martin, Granderson Des Rochers, Martin, Jerome Powell, Liu Jie, Shari Redstone, David A, CNBC Shari Redstone, Biden, Sinclair, Lina Khan, Joe Biden, Khan, There's, John Harrison, Brian Roberts, Drew Angerer, Donald Trump, Trump, David Zaslav, Michael M, Disney, Nelson Peltz, Jay Rasulo, Bob Iger, he's, LightShed's Rich Greenfield Organizations: Universal Studios, Warner Bros . Discovery, Disney, Paramount Global, Comcast, Granderson, U.S, Federal, Washington , D.C, Xinhua News Agency, Getty, Treasury, Federal Reserve, Allen, Co . Media, Technology Conference, Grogan, CNBC, Trump, Nexstar, Gray Television, Federal Trade, Verizon, Mobile, NBCUniversal, CBS, NBC, EY, Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference, Trump's Department, Justice, Time Warner, Republican, Democratic, Netflix, Cable, Warner Bros, New York Times, Santiago, Getty Images Media, Management, Paramount Locations: Washington ,, United States, Sun Valley , Idaho, Tegna, Europe, U.S, EY Americas, New York City
Shares of Finland's Nokia plunged to a three-year-low, as the telecoms company lost out on a major deal to roll out a new telecoms network in the U.S. with industry juggernaut AT&T. Helsinki-listed Nokia shares were down 7% at 9:40 a.m. London time on the news that AT&T will be partnering with Swedish rival Ericsson, which will manufacture 5G equipment for the project at its factory in Lewisville, Texas. AT&T spend is set to be near $14 billion over its five-year contract with Ericsson, the companies said late Monday. The partnership covers the deployment of an open radio access network (Open RAN) in the U.S., which AT&T expects to use for 70% of its wireless network traffic by late 2026. Nokia CEO Pekka Lundmark called the news "disappointing," but said that the company remained "fully committed" to Open RAN and had a strategy to diversify its business and improve profitability.
Persons: Pekka Lundmark Organizations: Ericsson, Nokia, Helsinki, Swedish, RAN Locations: U.S, London, Lewisville , Texas, Stockholm
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. Nio — The Chinese automaker climbed about 3% after reporting a smaller-than-expected loss in the third quarter. Nio has taken steps to bring down costs recently, including a 10% cut to its workforce last month. CVS Health — Shares gained 4% after CVS said it would overhaul the way it prices prescription drugs . GitLab — The software company's shares jumped more than 12% a day after the company reported better-than-expected results for the fiscal third quarter.
Persons: Nio, GitLab, Adecoagro, Albemarle —, Piper Sandler, , Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox Organizations: Apple, Bank of America, CVS, FactSet, UBS —, UBS, Suisse, Nokia, Ericsson —, Ericsson's, Ericsson, Albemarle Locations: China, U.S, Monday's, Ericsson's U.S, Sweden, Finland
AT&T Drops Nokia for Ericsson in $14 Billion Deal
  + stars: | 2023-12-04 | by ( Drew Fitzgerald | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
AT&T said its shift to Ericsson will fast-track its network overhaul and allow it to buy hardware and software from a broader range of suppliers in future years. Photo: patrick t. fallon/Agence France-Presse/Getty ImagesAT&T struck a deal with Ericsson to buy up to $14 billion of its hardware and services after the Swedish equipment supplier pledged to open up its software to competing systems. The five-year agreement would move virtually all of AT&T’s new purchases of certain cell-tower equipment to Ericsson, replacing existing machinery from Finnish rival Nokia in many markets. The Dallas-based telecom giant said it plans to start the swap next year and aims to have 70% of its wireless network traffic passing through open platforms by late 2026.
Persons: patrick Organizations: Ericsson, fallon, Agence France, Getty, Nokia Locations: Swedish, Dallas
The AT&T logo is seen on a store in Golden, Colorado United States July 25, 2017. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSTOCKHOLM, Dec 4 (Reuters) - AT&T (T.N) said on Monday it plans to use so-called ORAN technology for 70% of its wireless network traffic in the United States by late 2026 and will move from two telecom vendors to one. While the technology has been tested by several telecom providers, it has not been widely adopted. AT&T's push for the technology will likely be a major boost for Open RAN. The U.S. telecom company's spending could approach roughly $14 billion over the five-year term of the contract with that one vendor, the company said.
Persons: Rick Wilking, Supantha Mukherjee, Matthew Lewis Organizations: Golden , Colorado United, REUTERS, Rights, Open RAN, Ericsson, Nokia, Thomson Locations: Golden ,, Golden , Colorado United States, ORAN, United States, U.S, Stockholm
Apple on Wednesday announced it is granting iPhone 14 users an additional free year of its safety service Emergency SOS via satellite. Emergency SOS via satellite allows users to text emergency services even if they are outside of an area with Wi-Fi or cell coverage. The free trial of Emergency SOS via satellite applies to iPhone 14 users who activated their device in an eligible country or region before Nov. 15, Apple said. The service is also available to users who purchased one of Apple's iPhone 15 devices, which was announced in September. The feature is free to iPhone 15 users for two years.
Persons: Apple, hasn't Organizations: Apple, Wednesday, Qualcomm, Iridium, AAA
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