
When organizations don’t remove malware on themselves, Assistant Attorney General John Demers said, the decision becomes “do that action ourselves” or let known malware sit. An interior ministry official said such data would be anonymized, though privacy experts say anonymizing data so it can’t be later reattributed is difficult.įBI takedowns: A legal tool giving the Federal Bureau of Investigation authority this month to disable malware on certain computer servers compromised in a hack ofĮxchange email system could be expanded. One portion of the bill would allow French intelligence officials to use older intelligence data, including data the government isn’t currently allowed to retain, to train AI systems to look for unforeseen patterns and develop new tools.

Government algorithms would alert intelligence officials when certain criteria are met, such as an internet user visiting a specific sequence of pages.įrench Interior Minister Gerard Darmanin said intelligence officials would need approval from him, the prime minister and an outside agency to unmask a person flagged for his or her browsing.
#MONIT DIGITALOCEAN FULL#
Said the government plans to submit a bill to parliament seeking permanent authority to order telecoms firms to monitor not just telephone data but also the full URLs of specific webpages their users visit in real time. “We’re continuously iterating and evolving our platform to support larger applications.AI spy: On Wednesday, France’s Prime Minister “We’re going to continue to build a platform love through simplifying the complexity of infrastructure,” said Wainer. By the end of the year, the product will be much more robust with the ability to support larger production workloads. There are a lot of products in the pipeline, he said, and many are focused on being able to scale with ease and use distributed services on top of DigitalOcean. “She’s helping us level up,” Wainer said. The company continues its aggressive roadmap, thanks to Austin. The easy setup saves time, enabling businesses to move a lot faster, he said. Developers use Droplets at home, then take DigitalOcean to work when the company starts needed cloud solutions.ĭigitalOcean now has over 50,000 teams using their product daily. In the past, growth has mostly been from the bottom up, Wainer explained. We want to deliver that experience to developers because that’s what will win for us for the long term.” “As a developer, you want to love the tool you use. That’s a key differentiator, he explained. Which is simple to use and set up, according to Wainer.Īlready have Droplets and want to add monitoring? Or didn’t configure it when you set up your Droplet? No problem: An open source graphing agent will enable Monitoring on an existing Droplet.

Monitoring can be done through their control panel or through an API. What’s different is that the service is integrated into each Droplet in an easy-to-view interface, with no configuration required.Īdding monitoring while spinning up a new DigitalOcean cloud server is a breeze with no configuration required beyond going through a few checkboxes. It’s about allowing their customers to move away from external monitoring service likes DataDog or NewRelic. There is nothing new about the functionality, conceded Wainer.

Alerts can be delivered via email or Slack, depending on developer preference. “It allows the developer to have more visibility into their infrastructure so they can make better decisions to optimize their applications.”ĭevelopers can monitor inbound and outbound bandwidth, collect metrics and set specific thresholds by percent (e.g., if your CPU usage is above a seventy percentage, an alert is generated). The launch follows on the heels of the launch introduction of load balancers in February, this is one more step in delivering on DigitalOcean Chief Technology Officer Julia Austin‘s promise to expand DigitalOcean’s capabilities for making the cloud easier to use.Īll of the standard monitoring functions are provided, said Mitch Wainer, DigitalOcean co-founder, in a phone interview. The New York-based cloud service provider DigitalOcean has unveiled an integrated monitoring service, one that provides operational health and resource utilization data into each Droplet (DigitalOcean’s term for an individual cloud server.)
