During GISEC 2024, Telecom Review conducted an exclusive interview with du’s Chief ICT Officer, Jasim Al Awadi, who discussed the significance of digital trust, collaboration and artificial intelligence within the cybersecurity landscape, along with the digital telco’s impact and commitment to enhancing the UAE’s cyber defense.

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Read more: du's Impact on Cybersecurity Explored at GISEC 2024

Cloud transformation in the telecom industry requires a collective shift, and Dell Technologies has deep experience in guiding telcos as they embark on this journey. Over the last few years, Dell’s Telecom Systems Business (TSB) has led multi-year cloud transformation shifts across leading UAE customers, bringing significant reductions in costs while dramatically fueling business agility.

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Read more: Transforming UAE Telecoms Through Cloud Security and Open Standards

In 2024, the International Girls in ICT Day, supported by the ITU, will be celebrated on April 25. For this year’s theme, the discourse will focus on ‘Leadership,’ underscoring the critical need for strong female role models in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) careers.

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Read more: Breaking Glass Ceilings, Building Bridges: Celebrating Women's Leadership in ICT

Notes from the Chief Editor
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For over two years now, the American authorities - starting from the FCC to the White House and the whole President Trump administrative team – have been keeping Huawei away from the American telco market for security reasons.

How can security fears be justified and true if Huawei did not deploy any networks in US markets, especially not for major US carriers, not even 4G?

The picture has become clear. 5G technologies will be the key for fast, advanced communication and mobility, and will have direct influence on nations and their futures.

No US vendor has 5G technology; it is led by Huawei, and ZTE is from China, and Nokia and Ericsson are from Nordic countries. So, the US authorities find themselves left behind despite all the high-tech hubs they’ve established, such Silicon Valley.

The focus is to invest with European vendors. In fact, the White House called for a 5G forum in March to plan how to face Huawei technologies and to accelerate the development of affordable, competing 5G wireless technology - as confirmed by President Donald Trump’s top economic adviser.

“We’re working carefully, closely, with Nokia and Ericsson,” National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow said. “We’re going to be holding some kind of a conference in about a month. I’m sure the president would join us in part, that would include Samsung, that will include all of our guys.”

Companies including AT&T Inc., Verizon Communications Inc. and Qualcomm Inc. would be represented as well.

The US has engaged in a campaign to dissuade other countries from using Huawei equipment in emerging 5G networks, but the effort has faltered due to a lack of competing technology.

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