Putin, Russia and cruise missile
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Russian Secrets, a new cross-border investigation, reveals the shadowy procurement network behind Russia’s surveillance program Harmony.
As the Kremlin throttles WhatsApp and Telegram, the new MAX messaging app is moving Russia closer to a restricted internet without foreign technology.
Last year, fiber-optic drones emerged as a game-changing technology in the Russia-Ukraine War. By transmitting data through fiber-optic cables, these drones are immune to the electronic warfare systems that both sides use to disrupt the control and ...
Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky warned the UN last month that AI was contributing to "the most destructive arms race in human history". He called for global rules for the use of AI in weapons, and said the issue was "just as urgent as preventing the spread of nuclear weapons".
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South Korea's military chief says Russian tech possibly went into North Korea's new missile
South Korea's chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said on Tuesday that Russian technology possibly went into North Korea's new intercontinental ballistic missile.
Ukraine said over 100,000 foreign-made parts were in the drones and missiles Russia used in a single night's attack. Some of those parts were from companies in allied countries like the US and UK, it said. Ukraine has previously found Western parts in ...
The war between Russia and Ukraine has become a war of technology. In February 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine. The war has been ongoing for the last three years, with Russia holding a section of Ukraine under its control and continuing aggressive efforts to ...
Throughout the war, Russian drones and missiles have repeatedly targeted railway infrastructure, mostly in regions near the front line. In March, the rail operator also endured a major cyberattack that disrupted online ticketing and other services for a week.
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Bloody letters and battlefield art: Russian museum's tribute to North Korean soldiers in Ukraine
When they are not fighting, they write poetry, letters home or words of praise to their supreme commander,” said one of the directors at Moscow's Museum of Victory.
Russia secretly used front companies to buy Western technology and erect a surveillance net in the Arctic where its submarines operate, an investigation shows.