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Brooks Running Senior Business Systems Analyst – Product … – Fitt.co

Who We Are:

At Brooks, we believe a run can change a day, a life, the world. Everyone who works here is a key part of our obsession to make the best running gear on the planet.We want our business which also happens to be our passion to be a place where everyone feels welcome and comfortable being themselves. Our company culture defines us, bonds us together, and drives our success. We live this culture daily through our brand values: Runner First, Word is Bond, Champion Heart, There is no I in Run, and Keep Moving. This means we always solve for the runner, do what we say we will, give it our all, are generous with our humanity, and find a way to keep moving every day, because joy is kinetic.

Are you ready to help create something extraordinary?

Your Job:

As a Senior Business Systems Analyst for product systems, you will collaborate with creators and consumers of Brooks product data to manage and support their IT-enabled systems. Your top priority will be oversight of our FlexPLM enterprise product lifecycle management (PLM) system followed by learning about and providing backup support for our Contentserv PIM system. We have several critical integrations between FlexPLM and downstream consumers of Flex Product data including Infor M3 ERP, Contentserv PIM and Brooks Enterprise Data Warehouse (BAM). You will be responsible for understanding the data flows to each of these systems.

You will work with PTC and our 3rd party FlexPLM support partner, as well as other internal systems teams to ensure the Flex technology and integrations are stable and maintained to meet our business needs. While much of your effort will focus on helping product teams fully exploit the features and functions of the FlexPLM system, a key component of this role is to understand the technical capabilities and limitations of our systems and how to best leverage them in the Brooks environment. You will work with business partners to develop business requirements, review functional requirements, troubleshoot integrations with other systems, coordinate deployment of customizations and own the Brooks Change Management process for FlexPLM.

Your Responsibilities:

Qualifications:

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ING on Building a Cloud Native Bank – The New Stack

This post is one of a series of posts previewing KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2023, April 18-21, Amsterdam. Join us there, to learn more about the transformative nature of cloud native applications and open source software.

In todays world, customers expect a superior experience. This means technology, now even more than before, has become an essential link to provide those always on seamless digital services which enable our customers to stay safe and secure.

Since ING, a global bank with over 37 million customers, has a history of adapting to change, were always aiming to be a step ahead. To stay ahead in a banking tech environment, you need to be very opinionated on how IT is applied.

But this is not always the case in the broader tech ecosystem we depend on, which has so many other stakeholders to satisfy and, therefore, too often security (let alone compliance) is an afterthought.

So, we expect our employees to challenge this tech ecosystem by showing it is possible to have better security and easier compliance. We didnt become who we are by being a follower.

Our customers (and by extension the politicians they elect and the regulators they have instituted) rely on ING to deliver on the promises we make; trust is our license to operate.

And we try hard to avoid any outages which could erode this trust. Of course, any outage could be a dent in our professional pride.

Figure 1

Its safe to conclude that as INGs tech employees, we have plenty of incentives to build a better tech ecosystem for ING.

Let me share in a bit more detail what being a bank means from a tech perspective.

For all the buzz around INGs tech over the past years, sometimes our image is greater than our actual delivery. Yes, we dared to take some big leaps in the early days of DevOps and Agile, and we harvested the consequences of that, both positive and negative.

The inverse is also most certainly true: working in a bank has a certain image, and while there are certainly valid reasons for that, people dont always realize that banking tech systems are still today some of the most complex tech systems in this world. And you would be right to challenge banks if this is a flaw or a virtue.

For good or bad, the fact is by operating those systems for decades, banks have collected a significant amount of institutional knowledge on how to securely operate complex systems at scale, which not even todays hyperscalers have caught up with (as the larger banks in this world have at least a 25-year head start).

This means most banks have something to offer to individuals, open source communities and other partners. Hence, ING decided to become more active in the tech community:

But please dont misinterpret us opening up for advocating complexity. On the contrary, we definitively have the desire to simplify our tech ecosystem.

We learned our lessons the hard way and know for sure we want to reduce complexity, get away from tightly coupled systems, unmanageable vendor lock-ins, obsolete (sometimes even self-maintained) components and so on and rather today than tomorrow. But reality always kicks in, and IT transformations do take their time.

Nevertheless, like any other tech department in any other company in this world, in the end, were still learning and improving day by day.

Part of those improvements is rebuilding our legacy systems into cloud native systems. That has been a journey for ING we started around 2015 by thinking through the concepts of our then next-generation infrastructure offerings within the enterprise architecture department. How could we enable faster and easier adaption of new technologies in ING?

One thing was obvious: we would need to tear down the walls of our vaults, open up our systems and build digital platforms.

Figure 2

To be quite honest, we were looking into concepts like separating Runtime Hosting from Data Services. (Based on the 12 Factor paradigm, as well as the work of Kolb & Wirtz: Towards Application Portability in Platform as a Service, University of Bamberg. It quickly became known internally as The Bamberg Model.) And we contemplated an API-PaaS delivery (something like Cloud Foundry) for our developers.

Then we experienced the Agile revolution within INGs infrastructure departments, and our ideas of protecting Developers against themselves by limiting degrees of freedom and prescribing infrastructure patterns went down the drain. The result of these revised insights was a serverless Kubernetes-Namespace-as-a-Service (NaaS) delivery model in which Developers are fully responsible for everything they do within their namespaces. This NaaS is a globally useable building block providing a modular and scalable foundation to host INGs immutable workloads. And it was born out of a collaboration between INGs Polish, German and Dutch engineers.

Figure 3

As a result, some DevOps teams building and managing INGs applications flourished, while others struggled with the cognitive load of these freedoms and responsibilities. Sadly, this learning experience did cause us some outages which might have been avoidable, in hindsight.

Debates with teams who want cluster-level privileges to run their applications (and are de facto asking for dedicated Kubernetes clusters) and teams who find it too hard to consume and operate namespaces and would prefer to have an API-PaaS style delivery or a Functions as a Service are still common, even with this NaaS operating model.

The other reality we had and have to deal with is a scarcity of engineering resources. We couldnt realistically develop and maintain both an API-PaaS and a NaaS model simultaneously (let alone the other models mentioned), especially since we initially did not have a large volume to make a business case with.

In the end, everybody involved was a bit right and a bit wrong. The most important lesson here is that a one-size-fits-all operating model will only work if the organization around it is aligned with it and supports its developers to work in that operating model.

Fast forward to today:

ING is looking to assist its developers with a private cloud offering standardized services like the already mentioned Kubernetes NaaS. That NaaS is provided by the second generation of INGs Container Hosting Platform (ICHPv2). ING builds 36 ICHPv2 components to create that NaaS and make it fully automated.

We call the architecture behind ICHPv2 Zero-Privilege, and it will be presented publicly at KubeCon + CloudNativeCon EU (April 19-21 2023) in INGs corporate hometown of Amsterdam. During that same conference, ING will open source the first three NaaS components under the Neoria (Dockyard) brand at the ING booth:

These components have enabled ING to significantly reduce our CPU usage and hence our CO2 footprint. And since ING is putting sustainability at the heart of what we do, we make this code available to the rest of the world so even more CPU cycles can be saved and corresponding CO2 exhaust avoided.

But were only getting started.

Accompanying the Zero Privilege Architecture talk, there will be a second ING talk, Kubernetes: Resistance is Futile, from a presenter actually using this Private Cloud ecosystem.

During various pre-conferences, ING speakers will also share their expertise with the audiences:

At the ING booth, we have a multitude of interesting Booth Talks ranging from the workload configuration templating services which are offered on top of NaaS (Kings Road) and INGs proprietary Service Mesh (Touch Mesh) to INGs future hybrid cloud (Public Cloud Foundation/Paved Roads) and many more.

There will also be scheduled visits of all the ING speakers from KubeCon and its pre-conferences. In case you didnt get to ask questions after the talk or missed the talk entirely and regret that, heres your second chance!

Last but not least, the Chairman of INGs Open Source Board will be at the ING booth sharing how ING is evolving from a consumer to a contributor in the ecosystem.

We hope this article and our presentations at KubeCon will give some insights into what it means to be in a banking tech environment and how to transform into a Cloud Native bank.

Obviously, theres much more to share than we have space for in this article.

If you are in the opportunity to travel to Amsterdam, we hope to speak to you during KubeCon EU and hear your feedback. And even if you do not work for a bank, feel free to approach us and learn how to improve tech(-security) ecosystems in general, wherever youre employed.

The artwork in this presentation (Opening Up and visuals Cloud Native ecosystem Kube) is from my esteemed colleague, Theo Sommer.

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AWS is giving startups a big generative AI boost – TechRadar

AWS is offering a new program for 10 lucky startups in the generative AI space to help develop and implement their business.

The AWS Generative AI Accelerator will last for 10 weeks, giving startups the resources and mentoring to build their products before putting them in contact with investors and customers.

Applications are open now and will close on April 17. The chosen 10 will embark on the program from May 24 to July 27, 2023, which will mainly take place online. There will be two sessions in person, one at the start of the week and one in the final week in a Demo Day held at AWS Startup Lofts inSan Francisco, CA.

In terms of funding, the startups can receive up to $300,000 in AWS credits to build their products within AWS, using the cloud service's AI and Machine Learning (ML) tools to do so.

$200,000 of these credits will be given to the startups in the form of AWS Promotional credits, which are aimed at sustainable companies who make applications via cloud hosting.

In addition, an extra $100,000 in credits will be up for grabs as part of AWS Activate, which Amazon describes as the "solution to ascalable, reliable, and cost-optimized startup." The startups will have to separately qualify for the AWS Activate program to be entitled to these extra credits.

Each startup will also be provided with mentors who have expertise in their given field to help with both the technical and business sides of their enterprise. Other sessions will focus on improving machine learning performance, stack optimization, and go-to-market strategies.

They will also be given the chance to interact with one another as well as industry leaders in networking events, which will also see them meet investors and potential customers.

At the end of the program, the startups will pitch there products at the Demo Day to investors, customers and the press, with the purpose of raising awareness for their business.

AWS is ideally looking for startups who already have an MVP developed and are seeking seed funding within the next year and a half. It will also consider machine learning startups who are already using cloud technology or plan to.

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AWS is giving startups a big generative AI boost - TechRadar

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Cloud Services Market: The global market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 20% to reach $3.2 Trillion by 2033 – openPR

According to the report, the global Cloud Services market is expected to grow from $610 Billion in 2022, which is expected to reach $3.2 Trillion by 2033, growing at the CAGR of 20% from 2023 to 2033. The cloud services market refers to the industry that provides on-demand computing resources, such as storage, processing power, and applications, over the internet. Cloud services are delivered through a network of remote servers hosted on the internet, allowing users to access these resources from anywhere with an internet connection. The cloud services market is a rapidly growing industry, driven by the increasing adoption of cloud computing across various industries and the growing trend of digital transformation. Cloud services provide businesses with flexibility, scalability, and cost-efficiency, enabling them to optimize their operations and improve their productivity.

Request Free Sample Report or PDF Copy: https://report.evolvebi.com/index.php/sample/request?referer=Newsmantra&reportCode=018204

Key Highlights:The global Cloud Services Market size was valued at USD 610 billion in 2022 growing at a CAGR of 20% from 2023 to 2033.North America dominated the market in 2022Asia Pacific is expected to fastest-growing at the highest CAGR from 2023 to 2033

Evolve Business Intelligence is going to publish a new market research report providing market analysis that examines and evaluates the current and future conditions to identify trends, opportunities, and potential risks that may impact the performance of businesses operating within that market. This analysis typically involves collecting and analyzing data related to various factors such as economic indicators, consumer behavior, technological advancements, and regulatory policies that affect the market.The purpose of global market analysis is to provide businesses with insights and information that can help them make informed decisions about product development, marketing strategies, investment opportunities, and risk management. This analysis can be conducted using a range of tools and techniques, including statistical analysis, market research surveys, and trend analysis.

The New NormalThe COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the cloud services market, as remote work and digital transformation have become more important than ever. With the need for remote access to data and applications, the demand for cloud services has increased, particularly in industries such as healthcare, education, and finance. The pandemic has also led to changes in the way businesses use cloud services, with an increased focus on security, reliability, and resilience. As a result, there has been a growing demand for cloud services that can provide advanced security features, data protection, and disaster recovery capabilities.In terms of COVID 19 impact, the Cloud Services market report also includes the following data points:COVID19 Impact on Cloud Services market sizeEnd-User/Industry/Application Trend, and PreferencesGovernment Policies/Regulatory FrameworkKey Players Strategy to Tackle Negative Impact/Post-COVID StrategiesOpportunity in Cloud Services market

For more information: https://report.evolvebi.com/index.php/sample/request?referer=Newsmantra&reportCode=018204

Key PlayersSome of the major Cloud Services players holding high market share include Alibaba Group Holding Limited, DELL, Google, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise Development. These players use partnership and collaboration as a key strategy to gain significant market share to compete with market leaders.

The key players profiled in the report are:Alibaba Group Holding LimitedDELLGoogleHewlett Packard Enterprise DevelopmentInternational Business Machines CorporationMicrosoft CorporationOracle CorporationRackspace Hosting, IncCisco System, Inc.Amazon Web Services, Inc.

Segmental AnalysisMarket Segment By Cloud Type with focus on market share, consumption trend, and growth rate of Cloud Services Market:oPublic CloudoPrivate CloudoHybrid CloudoOthers Market Segment By Enterprise Size with focus on market share, consumption trend, and growth rate of Cloud Services Market:oLarge EnterprisesoSmall & Medium EnterprisesoOthers

Market Segment By Service Type with focus on market share, consumption trend, and growth rate of Cloud Services Market:oIaaSoPaaSoSaaSoBPaaSoManagement & Security ServicesoOthers

Market Segment By end-user with a focus on market share, consumption trend, and growth rate of Cloud Services Market:oBFSIoIT & TelecommunicationsoGovernmentoRetailoHealthcareoEnergy & UtilitiesoMedia & EntertainmentoManufacturingoOthers

Buy Latest Copy of Report Now at Higher Discount: https://report.evolvebi.com/index.php/sample/request?referer=Newsmantra&reportCode=018204

Global Cloud Services Geographic Coverage:North AmericaoUSoCanadaoMexico

EuropeoUKoGermanyoFranceoItalyoSpainoNordic CountriesoBeneluxoRest of Europe

Asia PacificoChinaoJapanoIndiaoSouth KoreaoIndonesiaoMalaysiaoAustraliaoRest of Asia Pacific

Middle East and AfricaoSaudi ArabiaoUAEoEgyptoSouth AfricaoRest of MEA

Latin AmericaoMexicooBraziloArgentinaoRest of Latin America

Reasons to Buy this Report:Industry and Market Understanding: This report provides a comprehensive overview of a particular industry or market, including its size, trends, key players, and future outlook. By purchasing this research report, you can gain a better understanding of the industry you are operating in or considering entering.Competitive Intelligence: This report provides detailed information on competitors, including their strengths and weaknesses, market share, financial analysis, key developments and strategies adopted, and product offerings. This information can help businesses develop effective competitive strategies.Investment Decisions: This report helps investors make informed decisions by providing data on market size, growth potential, and key trends. This information can be useful for identifying investment opportunities and evaluating risk.Regulatory Compliance: This report includes information on regulatory policies and requirements that affect a particular industry or market. This can be valuable information for businesses seeking to comply with regulations and avoid potential legal issues.

Overall, Cloud Services market research reports provide valuable insights and information that can help businesses and individuals make informed decisions in a rapidly changing global marketplace.

AddressEvolve Business IntelligenceC-218, 2nd floor, M-CubeGujarat 396191IndiaContact: +1 773 644 5507 Email: sales@evolvebi.comWebsite: https://evolvebi.com/

About EvolveBIEvolve Business Intelligence is a market research, business intelligence, and advisory firm providing innovative solutions to challenging pain points of a business. Our market research reports include data useful to micro, small, medium, and large-scale enterprises. We provide solutions ranging from mere data collection to business advisory.Evolve Business Intelligence is built on account of technology advancement providing highly accurate data through our in-house AI-modelled data analysis and forecast tool - EvolveBI. This tool tracks real-time data including, quarter performance, annual performance, and recent developments from fortune's global 2000 companies.

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North America Dominates Global Data Centre Server Market Due to Increasing Demand for Colocation Services – openPR

North America Dominates Global Data Centre Server Market Due to Increasing Demand for Colocation Services

The global data center server market is expected to grow from USD xx billion in 2022 to USD xx billion by 2028, at a CAGR of x% during the forecast period. The growth of the market is attributed to the increasing adoption of cloud computing, big data analytics, and the Internet of Things (IoT) technologies, which require high-performance and scalable data center servers.

The global data center server market has been growing steadily over the past few years and is expected to continue to grow in the coming years. The market is driven by the increasing demand for data center services from various industries, including telecommunications, healthcare, banking, and e-commerce.

It profiles some of the key players operating in the market, including HP, Dell, IBM Corporation, Fujitsu, Cisco Systems, Lenovo Group, Oracle Corporation, Huawei Technologies., Inspur Group, Bull (Atos SE), Hitachi Systems, NEC Corporation, Super Micro Computer, Silicon Graphics International ( Rackable Systems)and others. The report also includes detailed information on their business strategies, product offerings, and financial performance.

The rack server segment is expected to dominate the data center server market, followed by the blade server and modular server segments. North America is expected to be the largest market for data center servers during the forecast period, due to the presence of major players in the region and the increasing demand for data center services from various industries.

For more information on the report, visit: https://www.trouve360reports.com/global-data-centre-server-market-research-report-2022/

Data center servers typically consist of a processor, memory, storage devices (such as hard drives or solid-state drives), and networking equipment. They are designed to be highly reliable and scalable, with the ability to handle a large number of users and data-intensive applications.

In recent years, data center servers have become more energy-efficient and environmentally friendly, with the use of technologies such as virtualization and cloud computing. This has helped to reduce the overall energy consumption and carbon footprint of data centers, which are known to consume a significant amount of energy.

Related Reports:

White Box Servers Market, Global Outlook and Forecast 2022-2028: https://www.trouve360reports.com/white-box-servers-market-global-outlook-and-forecast-2022-2028/

Portable Modular Data Center (PMDC) Market, Global Outlook and Forecast 2022-2028: https://www.trouve360reports.com/portable-modular-data-center-pmdc-market-49874/

Network Video Storage Servers Market, Global Outlook and Forecast 2022-2028: https://www.trouve360reports.com/network-video-storage-servers-market-global-outlook-and-forecast-2022-2028/

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NICE Delivers AI-Powered CX to Accelerate Smart Self-Service Adoption While Improving Employee Engagement and Efficiency with Launch of CXone Spring…

New CXone capabilities provide real-time interaction guidance and unique low-code smart self-service options

HOBOKEN, N.J., April 03, 2023--(BUSINESS WIRE)--NICE (Nasdaq: NICE) today announced the Spring 2023 release of CXone, which adds new AI-powered capabilities that accelerate digital fluency to help brands master CXi (customer experience interactions). The new release unveils a comprehensive, well-rounded set of offerings to meet customers at their preferred digital doorstep and empower sales-driven agents to deliver seamless experiences to win new business. The new capabilities also include enhanced digital reporting capabilities, providing historical visibility into agent performance across multiple digital channels.

The CXone Spring 2023 Release produces plug-and-play simplicity to accelerate development efforts. An all-new bot skills library creates a community for bot builders to share capabilities to expedite development of smarter bots. No code templates enable customers to effortlessly create rich messaging across multiple digital channels including Google Business Messaging, WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, and Apple Messages for Business. This opens huge opportunities for agents to provide richer interactions on customers preferred digital touchpoints.

Ten new sales-effectiveness Enlighten AI models bring real-time interaction guidance to the front line of revenue generation. The models, specifically designed for agents engaged in sales, coach the agent in real-time, pinpointing opportunities, and displaying sales metrics and behavior scores for performance improvement.

"We are proud to launch another milestone that will allow our customers to leap forward in their journey to create AI-driven digital fluency," said Barry Cooper, President, CX Division. "The ability to build and deploy smart bots along with new Enlighten sales models is a major competitive differentiator, delivering real-time guidance to sales agents to win new customers and drive massive revenue growth for brands."

Story continues

About NICEWith NICE (Nasdaq: NICE), its never been easier for organizations of all sizes around the globe to create extraordinary customer experiences while meeting key business metrics. Featuring the worlds #1 cloud native customer experience platform, CXone, NICE is a worldwide leader in AI-powered self-service and agent-assisted CX software for the contact center and beyond. Over 25,000 organizations in more than 150 countries, including over 85 of the Fortune 100 companies, partner with NICE to transform - and elevate - every customer interaction. http://www.nice.com

Trademark Note: NICE and the NICE logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of NICE Ltd. All other marks are trademarks of their respective owners. For a full list of NICEs marks, please see: http://www.nice.com/nice-trademarks.

Forward-Looking StatementsThis press release contains forward-looking statements as that term is defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements, including the statements by Mr. Cooper are based on the current beliefs, expectations and assumptions of the management of NICE Ltd. (the "Company"). In some cases, such forward-looking statements can be identified by terms such as "believe," "expect," "seek," "may," "will," "intend," "should," "project," "anticipate," "plan," "estimate," or similar words. Forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause the actual results or performance of the Company to differ materially from those described herein, including but not limited to the impact of changes in economic and business conditions, including as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic; competition; successful execution of the Companys growth strategy; success and growth of the Companys cloud Software-as-a-Service business; changes in technology and market requirements; decline in demand for the Company's products; inability to timely develop and introduce new technologies, products and applications; difficulties or delays in absorbing and integrating acquired operations, products, technologies and personnel; loss of market share; an inability to maintain certain marketing and distribution arrangements; the Companys dependency on third-party cloud computing platform providers, hosting facilities and service partners;, cyber security attacks or other security breaches against the Company; the effect of newly enacted or modified laws, regulation or standards on the Company and our products and various other factors and uncertainties discussed in our filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"). For a more detailed description of the risk factors and uncertainties affecting the company, refer to the Company's reports filed from time to time with the SEC, including the Companys Annual Report on Form 20-F. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release are made as of the date of this press release, and the Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise them, except as required by law.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230403005068/en/

Contacts

Corporate Media Christopher Irwin-Dudek, +1 201 561 4442, media@nice.com, ET

Investors Marty Cohen, +1 551 256 5354, ir@nice.com, ETOmri Arens, +972 3 763 0127, ir@nice.com, CET

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The Role of the CFO in Sustainability Reporting – Sustainable Brands

With increased expectations to assume the role of climate controller in business, how should CFOs go about measuring the success of their organizations environmental policies?

The changing role of the Chief Financial Officer has been widely discussed inrecent years. CFOs today must be prepared to respond to growing interest fromstakeholders in their companys sustainability practices and are increasinglybecoming some of the most important drivers of sustainability initiatives acrossevery industry. So, lets look at why.

In the face of climate change,transparencyis becoming non-negotiable in modern business. CFOs have always handled financial andbusiness reporting; so, we are a natural fit for to take on sustainabilityreporting. Its not a question of whether CFOs will assume this newresponsibility but rather, when. Robust, data-drivenreportingis key to building and maintaining trust with customers, partners, investors andemployees; and this is something we need to deliver on now.

This shift in public sentiment and expectation shouldnt come as a surprise. Aswe witness the climate changing around us, the average consumer expects thebrands they support to be proactive and communicative about their environmentalimpactand how they will reduce it. Infact, arecent PwCstudyfound that 83 percent of consumers think companies should be actively shapingESG practices. The benefits flow internally, too in a recent study from theEuropean InvestmentBank,three-quarters of young employees surveyed say the climate impact of prospectiveemployers is an important consideration when job hunting.

With increased expectations to assume the role of climate controller inbusiness, how exactly should a CFO go about measuring the success of theirorganizations environmental policies?

The SB Socio-Cultural Trends Research, conducted in partnership with Ipsos, tracks the changing drivers and behaviors of consumers around the intersection of brands and sustainable living. Our latest report explores how brands can maximize the impact of their sustainability efforts by approaching carbon-label strategies through the lens of consumer perceptions learn more in SBs Q4 Pulse highlights report.

As you can imagine, this is not a one-size-fits-all process. Every company andevery leadership team has a unique purpose and set of values; and no twoindustries are necessarily impacting the environment in the same way. As astarting point, your climate strategy must be closely linked to your companystrategy and purpose. Whether an agriculture company has pledged to eliminatepesticide usage or a financial institution is decarbonizing its lendingportfolio,their respective CFOs should ensure clear performance targets are establishedand a company-wide plan is in place so meaningful progress can be delivered andreported on.

Externally, it might be assumed that because tech businesses arent typicallyconsidered among the biggest greenhouse gas emitters, we dont face as muchpressure to reduce and report our emissions. However, every business has a roleto play in supporting the transition to a net-zero economy. The tech industry isstill accountable researchers from Lancaster Universityestimatethat tech companies could contribute 2.1-3.9 percent of global greenhouse gasemissions.

This is why in conjunction with a companys sustainabilityexpertsand leaders across the business tech CFOs should work to integrate theircompanys environmental practices with their everyday compliance and trackingsystems. From there, the idea of publishing their progress is much less dauntingcome reporting season. Whether they decide to mesh their financial andsustainability reporting into a single document such as an Annual Report orpublish them separately, their sustainability practices and performance shouldbe clear for all to see.

In an effort to introduce more transparency around our environmental impact atXero, weve shared ourplans to work towardsnet-zero emissions and set clear emissions-reduction targets which we willshare in our Annual Reports, in line with climate science. We are looking toreduce our carbon emissions right across the business from reducing variouscontributors such as energy used in office spaces to indirect emissions in ourvalue chain from cloud hosting, business travel, corporate catering and ITequipment.

Thankfully, many organizations and standards bodies exist to provide directionfor companies looking to improve their sustainability performance and reporting.For example, the Task Force on Climate-related FinancialDisclosures and the UN GlobalCompactCFOTaskforce areencouraging and supporting companies to integrate sustainable practices into allaspects of their business and report on performance. The InternationalFinancial ReportingStandards(IFRS) is also developing standards for climate accounting that are due tobe released in 2023.

The most important thing to remember in all of this is to approach climateaction genuinely and with commitment. Publicly reporting your sustainabilityperformance has become as critical as reporting financial performance. Not onlyis it the right thing to do; it also gives leaders a broader picture oforganizational performance and will support the long-term success andsustainability of every business.

Published Apr 5, 2023 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST

Kirsty Godfrey-Billy is Chief Financial Officer at Xero a New Zealandbased technology company that provides cloud-based accounting software for small and medium-sized businesses.

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St. Cloud Man Pleads Guilty to November Shooting – WJON News

ST. CLOUD (WJON News) --A St. Cloud man has pleaded guilty to a charge where he shot another man in the stomach last November.

Thirty-two-year-old Vincent McDougle has pleaded guilty to the felony discharging of a gun - endangering safety.

St. Cloud Police responded to a report of a shooting inside an apartment in the 1400 block of 9th Avenue South on November 12th.

Authorities say when they arrived, they found the victim, a 31-year-old Minneapolis man, with a gunshot wound to the stomach. He was taken to St. Cloud Hospital in serious but stable condition.

Police say McDougle was also at the scene and arrested without incident.

Authorities learned the victim was visiting McDougle and the men got into an argument that became physical. McDougle then pulled a gun on the victim and they struggled again. During that struggle, McDougle fired the gun and shot the man in the stomach.

McDougle will be sentenced on June 21st.

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Inviting the internet into our cars and security systems. – The CyberWire

Car thieves are using CAN injection attacks to steal cars, Nexx may not patch critical vulnerabilities in its smart security devices, and Tesla employees apparently admit to sharing pictures (sometimes explicit) collected from Tesla cars owned by private citizens.

Ian Tabor, an automotive security expert of EDAG group decided to do a forensic analysis to find out how his car was stolen, reports SecurityWeek. He discovered that his headlight had been destroyed and the wires had been pulled out. The Register writes that Tabor investigated and found that various systems had seemingly failed or suffered faults,... the faults were generated as the thieves broke into a front headlamp and tore out the wiring, and used those exposed connections to electrically access the CAN bus. He concluded that the thieves probably used a hacking device that uses the cars controller area network (CAN) bus to inject false codes to start the car and open the door. SecurityWeek reports that Such hacking devices can be acquired on dark web sites for up to 5,000 ($5,500), and they are often advertised as emergency start devices that can be used by vehicle owners who have lost their keys or automotive locksmiths. These devices seem to be specific to car makes, which limits the thief (or locksmith) who uses them to one brand of cars. For this method car thieves still have to make physical contact with the car, and so experts recommend taking proper physical security measures. This leads to another story.

When purchasing a smart security system, buyers assume that the security of the system itself can be assumed as a given. There is always, however, an inherent risk associated with connecting security devices to the larger Internet. Sam Sebetan, an independent cyber security analyst working with CISA (the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency), posted on this issue. I discovered a series of critical vulnerabilities in Nexxs smart device product line, which encompasses Smart Garage Door Openers, Alarms, and Plugs, he writes. These vulnerabilities enabled remote attackers to open and close garage doors, take control of alarms, and switch smart plugs on and off for any customer. This is the last thing users would expect when installing a security device. Sebetans blog explains the vulnerability, noting that Nexxs servers fail to verify if the bearer token in the Authorization header corresponds to the alarm trying to connect... He further explains that the mac address for each device is the same as the devices serial number, which means that an attacker can register an already registered device and effectively take control of it. Nexx has not so far patched the vulnerability. Sebetan recommends that Nexx users deactivate their devices and write the company requesting a fix.

Several former Tesla employees admitted that they used to share pictures and videos from cameras installed in Tesla electric vehicles from 2019-2022 as reported by Reuters on 6 April. This media ranged from videos of naked Tesla owners walking to their cars to an image of users garages. (Why one would approach ones car naked isnt explained.) Among the higher profile images captured include shots of a James Bond submersible car allegedly captured inside Elon Musks garage. These cameras are installed to enable driver safety and automated driving.

Its no secret, formally at least, that Teslas collect and report images. Tesla states in its Customer Privacy Notice, We want to be very clear that in order for Fleet Learning camera recordings to be shared with Tesla, your consent for Data Sharing is required and can be controlled through the vehicles touchscreen at any time by navigating to Software> Data Sharing. Even if you choose to opt-in, the camera recordings are limited to 30 seconds and remain anonymous, ensuring its not linked to you or your vehicle.

Reuters reports that the computer program they (Tesla employees) used at work could show the location of recordings, which would seem to provide less anonymity than customers might expect. Knowing how a company uses your data is important, and experts recommend that, as onerous as slogging through the documents may be, users read terms of service and privacy notices.

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Inviting the internet into our cars and security systems. - The CyberWire

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Growing Nation-State Alliances Increase U.S. Cyber Risks – Government Technology

Cyber threats continue to escalate in new ways, especially with new nation-state alliances that are in opposition to NATO countries cyber defenses.

Consider this article from the past week in the Wall Street Journal: Russia Supplies Iran With Cyber Weapons as Military Cooperation Grows. Heres an excerpt:

Russia is helping Iran gain advanced digital-surveillance capabilities as Tehran seeks deeper cooperation on cyberwarfare, people familiar with the matter said, adding another layer to a burgeoning military alliance that the U.S. sees as a threat.

Russia and Iran both have sophisticated cyber capabilities and have long collaborated with each other, signing a cyber-cooperation agreement two years ago that analysts said focused mostly on cyber-defense networks. Moscow has long resisted sharing digital-offensive capabilities with Iran in the past, for fear they will end up being sold later on the dark web, the people said.

Last September, I described how NATO countries were being hit with unprecedented cyber attacks. But this trend has been growing for much longer, and cyber attacks are now accelerating rapidly due to a more coordinated effort from NATOs enemies.

Since 2014, closer ties between China and Russia have attracted speculation about whether the relationship will continue to deepen into an alliance. The 2015 Sino-Russian cybersecurity deal seemed to mark further Sino-Russian cooperation another arenacyberspace. The pact has two key features: mutual assurance on non-aggression in cyberspace and language advocating cyber-sovereignty.

If this pact is merely treated as a non-aggression pact, then Sino-Russian cybersecurity cooperation has a similar pattern to their overall relationship, which appears to be intimate but is actually problematic. However, looking past the non-aggression elements of the pact illuminates the key element of the agreementChina and Russias pronounced support for the concept of cyber-sovereignty. The support for cyber-sovereignty echoes the centerpiece of Sino-Russian cooperation in the general termsa challenge to US dominance in the international system.

Fast-forward to 2020 for this piece in War on the Rocks: Peering into the Future of Sino-Russian Cyber Security Cooperation. Heres a passage from that:

Beijing and Moscow have long wanted to control their domestic internets. Now they are working together to remake global cyberspace in their own image. The two launch widespread cyber operations that threaten U.S. interests, and they want to reshape the internet to reduce U.S. influence. Chinese hackers have mounted a long campaign to steal intellectual property, as well as military and political secrets, and are a growing threat to U.S. critical infrastructure. Russian hackers pose the threat of cyber espionage, influence operations, and attacks on the infrastructure of the United States and its allies. Moreover, China and Russia have over the past five years worked together to tighten controls on their domestic internet and promoted the idea of cyber sovereignty to diminish U.S. sway over the global governance of cyberspace.

Over the next decade, China and Russia are likely to continue close technical and diplomatic cooperation. Beijing now appears more willing to adopt information operations techniques historically associated with Russian actors to shape the narrative on the responsibility for and response to the COVID-19 pandemic, but the two sides are unlikely to coordinate on offensive cyber operations. To counter these efforts, policymakers should revitalize U.S. cyber diplomacy, providing an alternative framing to cyber sovereignty and building a coalition of like-minded partners to define and enforce norms of behavior in cyberspace.

Moving to 2021, we get a report from the international journal Contemporary Chinese Political Economy and Strategic Relations entitled, Cybersecurity Cooperation between Russia and China: Prospects and Problems. It covers strategic and tactical steps by China and Russia to strengthen their technology and cybersecurity cooperation at many levels.

Early this year, Cyber News offered a report entitled, Cybercrime from Russia and China: what can we expect next?:

In a recently published study of both nations, whimsically titled The Bear and the Dragon, global cybersecurity analyst Cybersixgill highlights an increased tendency for independent threat actors that is to say, ones not working for partisan groups such as Killnet or Dragonbridge to share expertise.

While these two ecosystems have historically remained separate, recently, the Russian and Chinese cybercriminal worlds seem to have collided, said Cybersixgill. Late last year, a limited-access Russian-speaking cybercriminal forum resurfaced on the underground after a turbulent shutdown in October this time, with a notable Chinese presence.

It cited apparent efforts by the forums administrators to enlist Chinese threat actors to their underground community, making sweeping changes to the forums interface to make it more accessible to both Mandarin- and English-speaking users.

Chinese recruits to the dark web platform were encouraged to participate in conversations, share tips, and collaborate with Russian counterparts on future attacks.

Finally, bringing us into late March 2023, the Atlantic Council published a report with the headline Xi and Putin just wrapped up talks in Moscow: What does it mean for the war in Ukraine and Chinas global standing?

They wrote: Its a friendship testing the limits. Chinese leader Xi Jinping left Russia on Wednesday after three days of talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, in which Putin endorsed Chinas 'peace plan' for Ukraine and the two leaders stressed the need to 'respect legitimate security concerns of all countries' to end the war a talking point Russia has used to blame NATO and legitimize its war of aggression. What did this visit do for Putins international standing? What role might China play in the war? How should Washington view this partnership? Below, our experts cut through the pageantry and diplomat-speak.

TechSpot just published an article that explains how Russia and China want to become world leaders in tech, security, andAI. Thy describe how Russian President Vladimir Putin and China leader Xi Jinping agreed on several items in their recent summit, and the agreement: The presidents agreed to form new models of cooperation in industries such as artificial intelligence, Internet of Things, 5G, digital economy, and low-carbon economy. Technological sovereignty is the key to sustainability. We propose further improving strategic partnerships in specific industries. By combining our wealth of research capacity and industrial capabilities, Russia and China can become world leaders in information technology, cyber security, and artificial intelligence.

This YouTube video shows how even India is concerned about recent cybersecurity collaboration agreements between Russia and China:

The recent federal government discussions regarding a ban on TikTok and other Chinese or Russian companies from doing business in the U.S. is another example of the tensions that are rising at the moment.

Bottom line, the simultaneous challenges that include the war in Ukraine, cooperation between NATO enemies in cyberspace and hostile nation-state collaboration with cyber criminals is leading to an increased risk profile for cyber defenders in the U.S. and within NATO over the next decade. The global cyber temperature is rising, and the stakes have never been higher.

State and local governments need to visit the CISA Shields Up website to learn more about the latest cyber threats impacting their sectors and what they can do about them.

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Growing Nation-State Alliances Increase U.S. Cyber Risks - Government Technology

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