The dotcom bubble crash was 20 years ago todaycould it happen once more?

The sector is a very different place than it was as soon as throughout the late 90s, and the well-established tech companies of in recent times aren't going to face the equivalent pitfalls as their digital ancestors. However no longer all are secure.
The world is a very different place than it was in the late 90s, and the well-established tech firms of today are unlikely to face the same pitfalls as their digital ancestors. But not all are safe.Original article
Author: Newsweek

Newsweek provides in-depth analysis, news and opinion about international issues, technology, business, culture and politics.

Newsweek has recently written 7 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "Several brands have left the project since it was first announced last June, mostly citing concerns about regulation, piling pressure on the Facebook subsidiary's hopes of creating a cryptocurrency". (January 22, 2020)
  2. "Video giant YouTube, which is owned by Google, has more than two billion users and claims to reach more U.S. citizens in the 18-35 demographic than any TV network". (February 21, 2020)
  3. "Researchers at the social networking website said bots are trained to behave like bad actors and set loose on hundreds of millions of lines of code to analyse the results and highlight security gaps". (April 16, 2020)
  4. "Cybersecurity experts were able to access up to 900 million user records linked to the software that were allegedly being stored in a database without adequate password protection". (March 11, 2020)
  5. "Through its reports, Google is helping to inform public health policy during the outbreak". (April 3, 2020)
  6. "Multiple YouTube accounts distributing content from Infowars were created last October and remained online until today, when "Newsweek" approached Google for comment". (February 3, 2020)
  7. "Google said its AI showed a "specialist-level accuracy" of more than 90 percent for the detection of referable cases of diabetic retinopathy (DR). In reality, it quickly faced unforeseen challenges". (April 28, 2020)
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