Fiona Jackson is a news writer who started her journalism career at SWNS press agency, later working at MailOnline, an advertising agency, and TechnologyAdvice. Her work spans human interest and consumer tech reporting, appearing in prominent media outlets such as TechHQ, The Independent, Daily Mail, and The Sun.
Expertise
Consumer Tech
Technology News
Education
NCTJ Diploma in Multimedia Journalism (Gold Standard)
Featured In
TechRepublic
TechHQ
TechWireAsia
eWeek
Highlights
<a href="https://www.techrepublic.com/article/ai-generated-code-outages">AI-Generated Code is Causing Outages and Security Issues in Businesses</a> (TechRepublic)
<a href="https://techhq.com/2023/09/how-will-conversational-ai-holograms-impact-business/">Conversational AI holograms for business: What will the impact be?</a> (TechHQ)
<a href="https://techhq.com/2023/08/how-is-the-fast-food-industry-turning-to-ai/">D’you want humans with that? How the fast food industry is turning to AI</a> (TechHQ)
<a href="https://techhq.com/2023/08/are-the-claims-of-superconductor-lk-99-true">“The game is over” for room-temperature superconductivity claim</a> (TechHQ)
<a href="https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-11723499/Could-ChatGPT-replace-Google-Experts-weigh-win-race-AI-search-engine.html?ico=authors_pagination_desktop">MailOnline looks at whether ChatGPT can put an end to Google’s £120 billion dominance by revamping how we search the net</a> (MailOnline)
<a href="https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-11925247/The-mobile-phone-turns-50-MailOnline-looks-evolution-device.html?ico=authors_pagination_desktop">The mobile phone turns 50! MailOnline looks back at the evolution of the device</a> (MailOnline)
The proposed mandate intends to discourage criminals from targeting critical national infrastructure and public services, as there will be no financial motivation.
Recommendations in the 50-point plan include increasing public compute capacity twentyfold, creating a training data library, and building AI hubs in deindustrialised areas.
Google has stated that its goal to reach net-zero emissions across all its operations and value chain by 2030 is now “extremely ambitious” thanks to its data centre usage.
The legislation, which came into force on Jan. 1, enables the U.K. government to investigate Google, Apple, and other tech companies’ potentially anticompetitive practices “more holistically.”