oneM2M s 7th Interoperability event delivers go-to-market confidence to IoT industry RealWire
2020-12-23
Sophia Antipolis, France, 23 December 2020 – Significant steps have been made towards the realisation of a standardised Internet of Things (IoT) ecosystem, during the global IoT standards initiative oneM2M’s 7th Interoperability event.
Global technology companies with a stake in the IoT joined a two-week virtual event of interoperability testing with oneM2M’s IoT standards, using a remote testing platform developed by ETSI[1] with the support of the EU-funded InDiCo project. Results from the event showed a 96% interoperability rate with oneM2M’s standard.
ETSI Technical Expert Laurent Velez said: “The event was a unique opportunity for companies to debug their products and check interoperability with other vendors. The event helped validate and enhance interoperability of products among the participating companies and this gives them the confidence to implem
Home » Telecommunication » oneM2M?s 7th Interoperability event delivers go-to-market confidence to IoT industry
oneM2M?s 7th Interoperability event delivers go-to-market confidence to IoT industry Posted by PublisherTelecommunication Wednesday, 23. December 2020
Sophia Antipolis, France, 23 December 2020 ? Significant steps have been made towards the realisation of a standardised Internet of Things (IoT) ecosystem, during the global IoT standards initiative oneM2M?s 7th Interoperability event.
Global technology companies with a stake in the IoT joined a two-week virtual event of interoperability testing with oneM2M?s IoT standards, using a remote testing platform developed by ETSI[1] with the support of the EU-funded InDiCo project. Results from the event showed a 96% interoperability rate with oneM2M?s standard.
23,000 Britons data was among unsecured info, finds research
Gareth Corfield Tue 15 Dec 2020 // 11:40 UTC Share
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Two thousand servers containing 45 million images of X-rays and other medical scans were left online during the course of the past twelve months, freely accessible by anyone, with no security protections at all.
Or so says research by CybelAngel, which sells a Digital Risk Protection Platform. Not only was the sensitive personal information unsecured, but malicious folk had also accessed those servers and poisoned them with apparent malware, the company added. The fact that we did not use any hacking tools throughout our research highlights the ease with which we were able to discover and access these files, said David Sygula, a senior cybersecurity analyst at CybelAngel and author of the firm s report.