רשתות סלולריות

5G Surges, 2G Fades, 6G Looms: Global Mobile Network Highlights (Sept 23–24, 2025)

ה-5G מזנק, ה-2G דועך, ה-6G באופק: עיקרי רשתות הסלולר בעולם (23–24 בספטמבר 2025)

עובדות מרכזיות הצמיחה ב-5G מזנקת ברחבי העולם, אך פערי אימוץ נותרים בעינם הפס הרחב הסלולרי מהדור הבא ממשיך להתרחב במהירות ברחבי העולם, כאשר נתונים עדכניים מדגישים גם התקדמות יוצאת דופן וגם פערים מתמשכים. רשתות 5G הוסיפו מאות מיליוני משתמשים בשנה האחרונה, והביאו
ספטמבר 24, 2025

Technology News

  • Nicaragua Tightens Internet Censorship with Convergent Telecommunications Law
    November 11, 2025, 3:54 PM EST. Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo have extended internet censorship with Nicaragua's General Law of Convergent Telecommunications (Law No. 1223). Critics call it a gag law that tightens state control over networks and the online space, leaving little room for dissent. The law grants the Nicaraguan Institute of Telecommunications and Postal Services (TELCOR) broad authority to demand data from audiovisual operators and providers, aligning them with police and intelligence services and enabling digital surveillance of who communicates with whom, from where, and when. Opponents warn this risks eroding freedom of expression and other digital rights, in tandem with reforms to the Cybercrimes Law, the Foreign Agents Law, and the so-called "treason" law.
  • Ford CEO reveals shocking discovery in Tesla that spurred a bold shake-up
    November 11, 2025, 3:52 PM EST. Ford's CEO says a shocking discovery inside a Tesla influenced his decision to pursue a bold shake-up at the company. The revelation, described as a catalyst rather than a grievance, underscores a growing industry push toward electrification, innovation, and competitive strategy. The interview highlights cross-automaker insights, lessons on culture, and the leadership steps Ford plans to take to accelerate product development, software integration, and customer experience amid a rapidly evolving auto market.
  • There's No AI Bubble, but Palantir Looks Overvalued
    November 11, 2025, 3:42 PM EST. The discussion centers on whether we're in an AI bubble. While one speaker says the market isn't bubble-prone, some stocks are too expensive, notably Palantir. Alex Karp pushes back, arguing about the cost to investors and misperceptions from traditional analysts. Adam Johnson notes he doesn't own Palantir, acknowledging that earlier it could have been profitable but now it's too expensive. Palantir trades at around 300x earnings and 100x revenues, versus Nvidia at ~32x earnings, implying slower growth and higher risk for Palantir. The panel recalls prior tech bubbles, where the Nasdaq reached 75-90x earnings, highlighting Palantir's lofty multiples compared to historical context.
  • WhatsApp for Apple Watch Brings Native Calls, Messages, and Hands-Free Control
    November 11, 2025, 3:40 PM EST. WhatsApp for Apple Watch is rolling out a native app that lets users send and receive messages, make calls, and manage notifications directly from the wrist. Moving beyond basic mirroring, the update adds native functionality, voice dictation, quick replies, and seamless chat management while keeping end-to-end encryption. The app syncs with iPhone via Bluetooth/Wi-Fi and preserves privacy as you go about your day. Users can view previews, reply with voice messages, and scroll chat history without unlocking their phone, delivering a true hands-free experience for workouts, meetings, or errands. Setup is simple: update WhatsApp on iPhone, then install the Watch version; the interface is tailored for small screens, enabling faster, distraction-free communication. A major milestone for wearable messaging.
  • Kremlin Decree Allows FSB to Silence Internet in Occupied Ukrainian Territories
    November 11, 2025, 3:36 PM EST. Authorities in Russia are moving to codify a new mechanism that would force telecom operators to terminate access to communication and internet services on demand by the FSB. The decree, reportedly applicable to Russia and temporarily occupied Ukrainian territories, would allow the FSB to temporarily restrict access without judicial review or justification, and would shield operators from liability. Critics say the measure enables surveillance, pressure, and repression, enabling targeted disconnection of activists, blocking of messaging apps, tracking of digital footprints, and the creation of zones of silence. The policy marks a broad expansion of information control in occupied regions, pushing residents toward propaganda and fear instead of verifiable news.