Tech
Arelion boosts Baltic connectivity with resilient route | Computer Weekly
In a move that it said will reduce latency to Western Europe for multinational enterprises in a key region, global connectivity and digital infrastructure provider Arelion has completed a major expansion of its Baltic network, constructing a fully diverse, high-capacity route between Helsinki and Warsaw, creating a resilient ring for traffic between Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland.
Explaining the rationale for the move, Arelion noted that Finland’s datacentre market is projected to reach $5.23bn by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 54.6 percent, underscoring the importance of robust digital infrastructure across the Baltic region. The project, partially funded by the EU’s Connecting Europe Facility 2 (CEF2) program, highlights how strategic investment can advance digital sovereignty in a historically underserved region.
Scandinavia has long been regarded as a connectivity hotspot, and to maintain this reputation for its clients in the era of increased and network-intensive artificial intelligence (AI) workloads, Arelion upgraded its Scandinavian network in summer 2025 to connect hyperscale datacentres and serve the region’s booming AI markets.
The new terrestrial path is intended to reduce latency between the Baltics and Western Europe, increase diversity in a geopolitically sensitive region and secure future capacity for what the connectivity provider regards as an underserved EU region.
The diverse terrestrial route connects the Baltics to Western Europe via subsea and land systems from Helsinki through the Baltics to Warsaw, bypassing Copenhagen and Stockholm to avoid bottlenecks and ensure high-availability connectivity for customers. Using open optical line systems with 400G coherent pluggable optics and 1.6 Tbps connectivity from its Waves programme, the route will provide long-term scalability to support what are anticipated as being the massive data flows of next-generation applications in Europe’s growing AI sectors.
Arelion’s expansion is also claimed to be able to deliver backbone-grade performance with predictable service-level agreements (SLAs) to reduce downtime risk, ensuring reliable business continuity for customers in cloud, financial services, manufacturing and other critical sectors.
Arelion added that by combining network fibres from regional partners with own infrastructure, the expansion provides enterprises and service providers with scalable, future-ready connectivity amid increased investment in local markets.
The infrastructure is also designed to provide customers with reliable, secure connectivity from Baltic markets into Nordic, Central and Western European data centre hubs. Arelion believes that organisations with latency-sensitive applications can benefit from consistent, predictable performance, resilient infrastructure and backbone-level security that could mitigate DDoS attacks and routing threats before they reach enterprise networks.
The route offers metro routing flexibility in major cities, including Warsaw and Helsinki and supports scalable IP Transit, Dedicated Internet Access (DIA), Ethernet, DDoS Mitigation and other global services.
Among the various points-of-presence (PoPs) throughout the region that will be connected through the expansion are Arelion’s Iso-Roobertinkatu 21-25 PoP in Helsinki; Greenergy’s Tallinn DC-1 PoP in Hüüru, Estonia; Tet’s Pērses datacenter in Riga, Latvia; The Riga TV Tower datacentre; the Delska DC2 (formerly RackRay) data centre in Vilnius, Lithuania; the Vilnius TV Tower datacentre; and Equinix’s WA1 datacentre in Warsaw.
Commenting on the route, Arelion vice-president and chief evangelist Mattias Fridström said: “This new route enhances diversity and bandwidth between the Baltics and Western Europe, delivering the secure, low-latency connectivity our customers need to scale AI and cloud applications. With support from the EU, we are strengthening Europe’s digital sovereignty while ensuring that enterprises and hyperscale operators can rely on resilient infrastructure to power innovation.”
Tech
SITA launches campus network to keep airport operations connected | Computer Weekly
For airlines to run critical operations on networks that are set up and run for them, removing the complexity and cost of managing connectivity themselves, air industry tech firm SITA has launched a new network solution designed to support the demands of complex airport and transport environments.
With around 2,500 customers, SITA technology supports more than 1,000 airports and more than 19,600 aircraft worldwide. The company said that it also helps more than 70 governments “strike the balance between secure borders and seamless journeys” and connects 45-50% of the industry’s data exchange to enable complex global networks to operate smoothly and reliably.
As part of the latter aim, the SITA Campus Network, powered by HPE Aruba Networking, aims to offer a managed network service covering more than 150 countries wherein SITA takes care of the design, procurement, shipping, installation, configuration and support for all devices involved. Boasting a low total cost of ownership (TCO), SITA is proposing “one of the most competitive” fully managed local area network/wireless local area network (LAN/WLAN) available in the industry.
Explaining the rationale for the launch, SITA noted that managing networks across multiple locations, devices and suppliers is complex and costly. Furthermore, it said that when networks are fragmented, performance suffers and disruptions can spread quickly.
SITA Campus Network is attributed with being able to remove this burden by delivering a fully managed network across wired and wireless environments. The campus network is claimed to combine “robust” connectivity with centralised, cloud-based management to ensure consistent, reliable performance across airport campuses and other large transport hubs.
Designed for high-density environments such as terminals, hangars and airline operations centres, the solution is said to support large volumes of users and devices without compromising performance, even during peak demand. By integrating HPE technology into its managed service, SITA’s customers get a network that is centrally operated by SITA while retaining the flexibility to use different technologies and vendors.
Available in more than 145 countries, with 24/7 operational support, SITA assured that by reducing the need for costly hardware and simplifying operations the network lowers both upfront investment and ongoing costs. Its pay-as-you-go model allows customers to scale usage up or down based on demand, with rapid deployment across locations.
This is said to reduce the need for on-site support, spare equipment and recurring training, freeing up IT teams to focus on higher-value activities. Where needed, the campus network connects to SITA’s global wide-area network services. This connectivity links more than 600 airports worldwide.
As is the norm with other leading networking solutions, the SITA Campus Network uses AI to improve visibility across the network, detect issues earlier and automate troubleshooting, helping reduce downtime. It also provides centralised management, allowing infrastructure and devices to be monitored and controlled across both on-site systems and remote environments.
Martin Smillie SITA senior vice-president of communications and data exchange, said integrating diverse systems and devices across airport environments is becoming more complex as operations become more connected: “At the same time, expectations on performance, resilience and security continue to rise. With SITA Campus Network powered by Aruba, we take on that complexity. We deliver a network that is set up, run and continuously optimised, so our customers can focus on keeping operations moving while maintaining control across increasingly demanding environments.”
Sujai Hajela, executive vice-president and general manager for enterprise campus and branch at HPE, added: “Airports and airlines have to support thousands of staff, passengers and mission critical systems across terminals, gates and airside areas – and any network issue shows up immediately as delays and frustration.
“SITA Campus Network powered by HPE Aruba Networking is built on our secure, AI-native technology to deliver a self-driving network that spots and fixes problems in real time, often before anyone notices, so operations keep moving and passengers stay connected.”
Tech
Chinese hackers using compromised networks to spy on Western companies, says Five Eyes | Computer Weekly
China-linked hackers are using networks of vulnerable internet-connected devices, including home routers, printers and smart devices, as cover to mount espionage and hacking operations.
The technique is now used by the majority of China-linked hackers as a way to obscure hacking and espionage attacks launched against organisations in the West.
The UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) and national agencies in nine other countries have warned today that Chinese-linked groups are now leveraging networks of infected devices “at scale” to target critical sectors globally and steal sensitive data.
According to an advisory issued by the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance – comprising the UK, the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand – and 10 other countries, Chinese groups are exploiting security vulnerabilities in unpatched internet devices to create networks to use as a staging post to launch further attacks.
“We know that China’s intelligence and military agencies now display an eye-watering level of sophistication in their cyber operations,” said NCSC chief Richard Horne in a speech at its CyberUK conference in Glasgow.
Covert networks hide ‘indicators of compromise’
The agencies warn that the Chinese tactics are making it difficult for organisations to detect and attribute malicious attacks on their computer networks using traditional “indicators of compromise”.
Chinese groups, for example, could use a UK-based infected device as a staging post to hack into a UK-based company, meaning that blocking non-UK IP addresses no longer provides a defence for overseas attacks.
They advise companies to adopt “adaptive, intelligence-driven measures” to better mitigate the risks, including monitoring traffic from internet-connected devices, virtual private networks (VPNs) and remote access devices to identify suspicious traffic.
Chinese-linked groups are able to evade detection by exploiting low-cost networks of infected devices that can rapidly be reconfigured so that traditional static IP block lists are no longer effective.
The networks are used for each phase of a cyber attack, from reconnaissance and malware delivery, to command and control and data exfiltration against targets of espionage and offensive cyber operations, according to the advisory.
Covert networks behind major hacking operations
Covert networks of compromised devices have been used by the Chinese state-sponsored group Volt Typhoon to pre-position for future attacks on critical national infrastructure (CNI).
The group has targeted communications, energy, transport and water services in the US, and has been able to maintain covert access to critical IT systems for five years or more.
It used a network of vulnerable Cisco and NetGear routers, which were no longer supported by the manufacturers and were no longer receiving updates of security patches.
Another Chinese group, Flax Typhoon, has used a covert network of 260,000 compromised devices, including routers, firewalls, webcams and CCTV cameras, to conduct cyber espionage against targets in multiple countries.
Hacking as a service
Chinese hacking groups have a choice of covert networks, each with potentially hundreds of thousands of endpoints, which frequently change, making it more difficult for companies targeted to block attacks, according to the advisory.
Chinese information security companies have maintained networks of infected devices, available as a service for Chinese-linked hacking groups.
Chinese company Integrity Technology Group controlled a network known as Raptor Train, which infected more than 200,000 devices worldwide in 2024.
Companies advised to take countermeasures
The NCSC advises companies to map internet-connected devices in their organisation and corporate VPNs, so they can understand which traffic is legitimate.
They should also introduce multifactor authentication (MFA) when employees use remote connections to dial into business networks.
Larger organisations can profile incoming connections based on operating systems, time zones, and the organisation’s systems configurations to identify legitimate traffic.
The Five Eyes and the NCSC advise the most at-risk organisations to actively track Chinese advanced persistent threats (APTs), using threat reports supplied by the NCSC to create dynamic block lists and rules to detect incoming threats.
“In recent years, we have seen a deliberate shift in cyber groups based in China utilising these networks to hide their malicious activity in an attempt to avoid accountability,” said Paul Chichester, NCSC director of operations. “We call on organisations to act now to better defend their critical assets.”
Tech
Top Chirp Discount Codes: Up to 67% Off
Chirp reinvented the wheel—or at least one type, the yoga wheel. Chirp Wheels are effective in relieving upper and lower back pain, sciatica, and tension headaches. WIRED contributor Hannah Singleton has said the Chirp Wheel XR-3 Pack has even helped undo her tech neck and alleviate her brain fog.
Recently, the wellness brand has expanded beyond its flagship wheels into recovery gear. The lineup now includes powered rolling massagers (which I’ve been using a lot lately for back pain relief), TENS units, and even a full massage table (Chirp Contour) that I’m currently testing (stay tuned for the full review). Where Chirp stands out from heavyweights like Hyperice and Therabody is in its simplicity and value. The products tend to focus on doing one thing well rather than piling on features you may never use. Chirp promos and discounts run frequently on the Chirp website, and we have Chirp discount codes, so you can get an even better deal on recovery gear that’s already reasonably priced.
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Chirp customers receive free shipping on U.S. orders over $75, and the perk stacks with the brand’s daily deals and most codes. If you time it right, you can shave a decent chunk off the final price. No promo code at checkout required.
Chirp Discount Code: Select Customers Can Get 15% Off
Chirp offers a 15% discount to certain groups through an online verification process. That includes: active-duty military personnel, veterans, and their dependents; first responders and law enforcement officers; medical professionals and healthcare workers; and teachers and academic administrators at any grade level.
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