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The Covid-19 pandemic has caused undeniable personal suffering and fiscal chaos across the UK – and, indeed, the world - for most of 2020, a year that many of us personally, professionally and economically have found difficult in ways we could never have anticipated.
According to the World Economic Forum (WEF), 65% of children entering primary school today will end up in jobs that don’t yet exist.
There are no prizes for realising that the UK aviation industry is currently in the depths of its biggest crisis in history, with most issues either created - or at least exacerbated - by the Covid-19 pandemic.
The Covid- 19 pandemic has us thinking differently about a lot of things. Security is high on that list.
The UK Government has announced its conclusions into a review of the Retail Prices Index (RPI) calculation.
‘Innovation’ has become a loaded word, one that can send a shiver down the spine of even the most forward-thinking CEO.
A few years ago, a breach that impacted several million people would have been big news. In 2019 roughly 3.5 billion people saw their personal data stolen in the top two security breaches of that year alone.
Cyber security has an air of mystery to it. Something hidden in the shadows and only able to be understood by technologists and spies.
The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the need for cyber security but also changed the very nature of the beast.
"Can we uninstall 2020? The current version has a nasty virus in it,” says the meme flying around social media for the past few months. There are, however, glimmers of light that can be found around the world which have arisen out of the pandemic.