Raytheon seeks £500m e-Borders payoff
The US company has lodged a claim against the government for half a billion pounds, saying the Border Agency wrongly terminated its contract to implement the e-Borders system
The US company has lodged a claim against the government for half a billion pounds, saying the Border Agency wrongly terminated its contract to implement the e-Borders system
A new procurement team will buy IT products and services for the whole of government, in a bid to prevent departments paying widely varying prices for the same piece of kit
Culture minister Jeremy Hunt, who has taken over responsibility for telecoms regulation, has begun consultation on a new law covering broadband, mobile and online TV services
Organisations including Which? and the Open Rights Group have written to the communications minister, calling on the government to preserve the open internet in the UK
The government is making all the right noises about super-fast broadband, but its own officials seem to be taking a different view, says Malcolm Corbett
A key European Parliament committee has recommended investigation into a ban on PVC and brominated flame retardants in electronics goods
In our fifth instalment of the Tech election 2010 series, the Scottish and Welsh nationalist parties talk about how they would act on rural broadband, ID cards and other tech issues
In the fourth part of our Tech election 2010 series, the country's special-interest parties tell ZDNet UK about the tech strategies they would pursue if in power
The government has approved the business plan for the National Skills Academy, which aims to train up IT pros with the skills the UK industry needs
Business secretary Peter Mandelson has said the government plans to look at a number of measures in an effort to revamp its technology strategy