This week in enterprise: Cyber consolidation quickens, AI transforms programming and open-source rifts widen
Consolidation seems to be accelerating in cybersecurity, and generative artificial intelligence is transforming programming very fast.
Those are two big trends that emerged this week in SiliconANGLE’s coverage of enterprise and emerging technologies. There was a lot more news on the earnings and antitrust fronts as well. And Nvidia just keeps on rolling, coming out with new chips, software and alliances that present a formidable challenges to a growing cast of rivals in AI.
Some breaking news today: Three firms opposed to Red Hat’s limitations on using Red Hat Enterprise Linux source code formed the Open Enterprise Linux Association to provide a fully open-source alternative. Plus, the driverless cars will roll in San Francisco despite protests. And Sam Bankman-Fried of crypto-fraud fame at FTX is headed for the slammer.
Analysts John Furrier and Dave Vellante will also discuss this and other news in their weekly podcast, theCUBE Pod, available here late Friday afternoon. And come Saturday, Vellante will have his usual deep dive in his Breaking Analysis, this one on the battle brewing for where generative AI will get done between cloud providers and on-premises hardware providers.
So let’s get into the details….
Less-open source code
Big changes afoot with the nature of open source in the enterprise: Oracle, SUSE and CIQ launch Open Enterprise Linux Association to target Red Hat Also note that HashiCorp yesterday said it’s going to a Business Source License instead of full open source.
Cyber consolidation
Baby steps to much-needed cyber consolidation (along with bigger steps by various PE players in the past year or two): Rubrik acquires cloud data security startup Laminar for reported $100M+ and Check Point Software buys secure networking startup Perimeter 81 for $490M … and on PE’s role: Rapid7 to lay off 18% of staff amid new takeover reports Also, U.K. cyber giant NCC Group just laid off more people.
Our writer Mark Albertson heard generative AI on everyone’s lips at Black Hat but everyone seems to be in the dark about its impact: Report from Black Hat: Many questions, few answers as cybersecurity world confronts AI threats
Analyst Jason Bloomberg wraps up Black Hat for us, and says the proliferation of too many cybersecurity vendors is indeed a big issue: At Black Hat, getting past enterprise cybersecurity ‘Oh sh*t!’ moments
Also from Black Hat, the US gamifies cybersecurity: White House launches contest to improve critical infrastructure cybersecurity with AI
And in other cyber news:
Cyber attacks on healthcare facilities accelerate: FBI investigates ransomware attack on California-based healthcare provider
And a big breach in elections: UK Electoral Commission hack steals data on up to 40M people
Just wait until they hack your Neuralink: New cyberattack method: tracking typing remotely via keyboard sounds
AI: It’s Nvidia and everyone else, and it’s all about developers for now
Nvidia presses its AI advantage: Nvidia debuts upgraded GH200 Grace Hopper chip with high-speed memory and Nvidia announces major updates to Omniverse with generative AI and OpenUSD and Nvidia puts generative AI at the forefront with AI Workbench and Hugging Face partnership and Rackspace to collaborate with Dell and Nvidia amid generative AI pivot As Furrier says, it’s looking Nvidia is the next Intel, the dominant provider for this new era of AI.
Developers are the current prime target for generative AI: Stability AI and Google target software developers with latest generative AI tools and AI development tooling startup Weights & Biases reels in $50M and DataRobot announces new applied generative AI offering for building trustworthy AI apps
And more here on how the rapidly changing nature of programming is making another, this time very big, leap in abstraction: https://venturebeat.com/ai/dont-quit-your-day-job-generative-ai-and-the-end-of-programming/ and https://www.infoworld.com/article/3704232/generative-ai-and-a-new-version-of-old-programming.html
Will Grannis, vice president and chief technology officer of Google Cloud, think it’s even bigger than that: AI as the next computing platform
AI in the data center gains some steam, or at least data center suppliers hope so: Rackspace to collaborate with Dell and Nvidia amid generative AI pivot Dell/Oro Group’s report on that: https://www.delloro.com/market-research/data-center-infrastructure/data-center-physical-infrastructure/
Another step in IBM’s bid for leadership in generative AI: IBM to host Meta’s Llama 2 for enterprise AI development
Maybe we just needed ChatGPT to tell us what the heck Web3 means: Aptos Labs partners with Microsoft to build AI blockchain solutions using OpenAI
No sh*t: Lucidworks study finds 93% of companies plan to increase their AI investments And you know when AI is heading toward a bubble when SoftBank gets back in: The AI Frenzy Resurrects the Old SoftBank
AI uh-ohs: Detroit police in deep water after using erroneous facial recognition to arrest pregnant black woman and AI-generated deepfake books were just sold on Amazon under a real author’s name
Earnings ups and downs
Kyndryl wows investors with strong earnings beat
Shares of big-data company Alteryx hammered on soft guidance
Datadog tops earnings estimates, but mixed guidance sends its stock falling
Palantir’s stock rises on growing profitability and strong guidance
Despite earnings beat, Lyft shares drop on lower revenue per rider
Strong earnings and revenue beat helps Twilio’s stock recover lost ground
CyberArk’s shares jump on guidance-topping earnings results
Antitrust action
Amazon to Meet With FTC Officials Ahead of Expected Antitrust Complaint (WSJ)
EU launches investigation into Adobe’s proposed $20B acquisition of Figma
Federal judge narrows scope of Google antitrust lawsuit brought by DOJ and states
Also notable
Frankly, I’m less worried about driverless cars than the drivers in cars now: Waymo and Cruise cleared to offer paid autonomous taxi services in San Francisco
The U.S.-China tech battle escalates, but Mike Wheatley found that not everyone thinks this new policy is a great idea: Biden orders ban on certain US tech investments in China and More from Axios
Twitter & Trump in hot water again: X Corp. hit with fine for not turning over data on Donald Trump
Paul Gillin gets the lowdown on Informatica’s move to a cloud model: Informatica CEO Amit Walia says multiyear turnaround is nearly complete
Remote work? Never mind (except I don’t think it’s going back to “normal”): Zoom, Other Remote-Work Champions Call Employees Back to the Office
RingCentral has a new CEO, an oddly timed move it seemingly tried to downplay behind new product introductions the same day: As it announces new CEO, RingCentral rings up more AI with RingCX and RingSense
We’re doomed: Elon Musk-backed Neuralink raises $280M in additional funding
Coming next week
Amazon’s “last rites” antitrust meeting with Lina Khan
Earnings from two bellwethers: Cisco in networking and Palo Alto Networks in cybersecurity
Image: Bing Image Creator
A message from John Furrier, co-founder of SiliconANGLE:
Your vote of support is important to us and it helps us keep the content FREE.
One click below supports our mission to provide free, deep, and relevant content.
Join our community on YouTube
Join the community that includes more than 15,000 #CubeAlumni experts, including Amazon.com CEO Andy Jassy, Dell Technologies founder and CEO Michael Dell, Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, and many more luminaries and experts.
THANK YOU