
Iran warned that US tech companies with Israeli links, including Google, Microsoft, Palantir, Nvidia and Oracle, were on Tehran’s list of “legitimate targets” for countermeasures.
Advertisement
As technological shifts substantially reshape the nature of conflict, the targeting of digital infrastructure – including privately owned data centres – was always only going to be a matter of time in an active conflict.
The convergence of AI-powered data analytics, cloud storage and military operations means that in highly digitised societies, the line between economic disruption and strategic jeopardy can be indiscernible. The data centres and algorithms that underwrite banking, healthcare, education and public administration for millions of civilians could also double as military targets for destruction.
Advertisement

Don't Miss:
-
Vance and Rubio emerge as early contenders to inherit Trump’s Republican Party
-
India raises diesel, petrol prices for third time in 8 days, amid tense US-Iran ceasefire
-
Is China building the world’s largest naval support ship?
-
Three Mexican Meth Cooks Arrested at Drug Lab in Nigeria
-
New Zealand to invest almost US$1 billion in drones, ships to protect maritime security

Trump, Xi, and a Defining Moment for the World
David Lapp on the Case Against Forcing Residential Consumers to Pay for Skyrocketing Data Center Costs
Elizabeth Burch on the Dark Side of the Tort Bar