EU's access to Mythos AI could significantly enhance cybersecurity, potentially narrowing the tech gap and boosting digital resilience.
The post Anthropic offers EU access to Mythos AI model for cyber security appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The EU's push for cloud sovereignty could reshape tech markets, boosting local providers and impacting US giants' dominance in Europe.
The post European cloud providers back EU push to cut reliance on US tech giants appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The EU's push for cloud sovereignty could reshape tech markets, boosting local providers and impacting US giants' dominance in Europe.
The post European cloud providers back EU push to cut dependence on US tech giants appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
This week’s special edition of Talking Europe asks whether the EU is ready for the disruption that comes with Artificial Intelligence. It is the most important technological revolution of the century, and is set to impact every aspect of our lives.
In the ever-evolving cybersecurity landscape, Microsoft has introduced various new features in Windows 11 designed to protect users from modern workplace threats. Among such features, Smart App Control (SAC) changes how Windows devices handle, and occasionally block, unwanted or potentially malicious applications.
But what exactly is Smart App Control? How does it work, who benefits most, and are there any caveats? In this story we’ll share some history and explain why SAC has been something of a stealth feature in Windows 11.
What is Smart App Control?
Smart App Control is a security feature in Windows 11 designed to block untrusted or potentially dangerous applications from running on a PC. Built directly into the operating system (through Windows Security), SAC leverages code signing, Microsoft’s intelligence cloud, and artificial intelligence to make real-time decisions about whether an app or application should be allowed to run. Its goal is to minimize the risk that malware, rans
Granting ENISA access to Mythos could reshape EU cybersecurity dynamics, potentially influencing policy and competitive advantages across sectors.
The post Anthropic grants EU cybersecurity agency access to its AI vulnerability scanner Mythos appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Granting ENISA access to Mythos could reshape EU cybersecurity dynamics, potentially influencing policy and competitive advantages across sectors.
The post Anthropic grants EU’s cybersecurity agency access to Mythos, its zero-day hunting AI appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The post NVIDIA is coming for Intel and AMD’s turf appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
On May 31, NVIDIA announced full production of its Vera CPU, positioning the 88-core chip as the data center industry’s first processor designed specifically for AI agent workloads. Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceXAI, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, ByteDance, and CoreWeave are among early adopters planning deployments, according to the company’s press release. The chip represents NVIDIA’s most aggressive push yet beyond GPUs and into the CPU market that Intel and AMD have dominated for decades. Where Grace, NVIDIA’s prior ARM-based server chip, shipped roughly 2.5 million units to date, Vera introduces a fully custom core architecture called Olympus rather than licensing an off-the-shelf ARM core design, according to Tom’s Hardware. Why AI Agent workloads are redefining CPU demand in data centers The economics of data centers for artificial intelligence have changed. As models progress from responding to que