The most important insurance news,in your inbox every business day.
Get the insurance industry’s trusted newsletter
Britain’s data centers will be classified “critical national infrastructure,” the government said on Thursday [Sept. 12], giving the servers and IT systems that underpin the country’s communications extra protection from cyberattacks.
Britain said the move would reassure companies building data centers, such as DC01UK, which it said had submitted proposals for a 3.75 billion pound ($4.88 billion) investment in Europe’s largest data center in Hertfordshire.
On Wednesday, Amazon’s cloud computing arm, Amazon Web Services, said it would spend 8 billion pounds in Britain over the next five years to build and operate data centers.
The government said the new designation would put data centers on an equal footing with water and energy, and allow it to minimize damage to the economy in the event of critical incidents.
“Bringing data centers into the Critical National Infrastructure regime will allow better coordination and cooperation with the government against cyber criminals and unexpected events,” technology minister Peter Kyle said.
A number of recent incidents have highlighted how vulnerable services are to IT blackouts. In July, for instance, the Crowd Strike outage disrupted appointments at health services across the country.
($1 = 0.7680 pounds)
(Reporting by Sarah Young, editing by Paul Sandle)
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Get the insurance industry’s trusted newsletter
Upgraded facilities have been delivered for The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards and 2nd Battalion Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, including refurbished o
The UK’s electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure has hit a significant milestone, with the number of public charge points surpassing 75,000. According t
National infrastructure service provider MJ Quinn has secured a newly refurbished industrial site in Brierley Hill as part of its ongoing UK ex
Initial work has begun to build a new railway station in Okehampton, Devon. The new 15 million GBP station, named Okehampton Interchange, will connect We