All articles by Greg Noone

Greg Noone

Greg Noone is the editor of Tech Monitor. His work has also appeared in The Atlantic, The Guardian and Outside.

How quantum deals with heavy weather

Is quantum computing all at sea when it comes to weather forecasting? Experts can’t agree on whether it’s a new paradigm or a flash in the pan.

Are harvest now, decrypt later cyberattacks actually happening?

Cybercriminals may already be hoarding data for when quantum computers become powerful enough to break current encryption standards.

How the biggest companies wrote their own generative AI guardrails

Making up the rules for internal use of generative AI products has been a process of trial and error.

Inside the UK’s SME tech crisis

While the government wants the UK to become the next Silicon Valley, digital technology is failing to reach swathes of small businesses.

Will generative AI really supercharge phishing attacks?

Generative AI offers phishing gangs the chance to massively scale their operations. But we may already be equipped with the tools to beat them.

IBM’s Prashant Jajodia knows banking’s next revolution will be AI-powered

In the first of a new series of Q&A’s with the tech industry’s leading movers and shakers, we ask IBM’s Prashant Jajodia what’s next for banking tech.

Have we reached peak generative AI?

ChatGPT usage is slowing and the generative AI market is infested with imposters. Is it time to call it quits on the technology?

Why can’t the NHS quit Palantir?

The NHS and Palantir hail how the latter’s software has helped reduce waiting times. Critics say that there’s more to the relationship than meets the eye.

So what are Labour’s tech policies, exactly?

Critics say Labour’s all at sea when it comes to AI and the rest of UK tech. But there’s more to its tech agenda than meets the eye.

Big banks badly need a cybersecurity overhaul

Central banks are getting nervous that their retail cousins are neglecting cyber security protections that might prevent a financial meltdown.