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Results 1-20 of 115 for cloud competing

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Justice, Defence and Equality: General Scheme of the Criminal Justice (Protection, Preservation of and Access to Data on Information Systems) Bill 2024: Discussion (5 Mar 2024)

...physical location and under the control of a person. Data is still held in this way and these provisions are still required. However, most data, whether personal or business, is now held in the cloud under the control of multinational Internet service providers. Records held in this way may be temporarily broken up into multiple segments or shards and stored in different servers in...

Written Answers — Department of Education and Skills: Research and Development (23 Jan 2024)

Simon Harris: ...Europe Association Agreement with the European Commission on 6 December 2021, allowing full participation in the programme. The negotiation process for incorporating new Associated Countries is the sole competence of the European Commission. EU Member States and the European Parliament have no formal role in these negotiations and are not required to approve the agreements. Israel has...

Digital Services Bill 2023: Second Stage (13 Dec 2023)

Louise O'Reilly: ...European Union. The purpose of the EU Digital Services Act is to impose a harmonised set of obligations on intermediary service providers, which include services such as Internet service providers, cloud services, messaging services, marketplaces or social networks, which have an intermediary role in connecting customers with goods, services and content online. The European Commission...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Transport, Tourism and Sport: Bus Services in Counties Dublin, Kildare, Meath and Wicklow: Discussion (29 Nov 2023)

...be maintained as we build towards 2024. I have just painted a positive picture of recent developments in Dublin Bus. However, this positivity is very much framed against the backdrop of some gathering storm clouds that have the potential to throw us off course. Congestion poses a massive challenge to all public transport operators and it would be wrong to ignore that reality. Dublin...

Seanad: Restoration of Oireachtas Library and Reading Room: Motion (28 Nov 2023)

Michael McDowell: Apart from the scandalous cost involved in it, of over €5 million, I have to say that the whole project has been clouded in mystery and almost the subject of deception. The affected members of staff of the Oireachtas, the Library staff, were told that the Members were in favour of this project. As Members in this House will know, I wrote out to all the Members of both Houses of the...

Ceisteanna ó Cheannairí - Leaders' Questions (11 May 2023)

Michael Lowry: ...process surrounding medical negligence litigation. In general, when a person accesses the healthcare system, the reasonable expectation is that the care and treatment received will be provided by competent and qualified professionals. There is also an expectation that treatment will take place in a safe environment and that no unnecessary harm will come to the person. By and large, this...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach: Investment Funds: Discussion (1 Mar 2023)

...big practical differences between dealing with a mainstream bank and dealing with a vulture fund. This is human stuff. It is basic humanity. These are people who do and do not have the capability and competency to deal with financial matters in general. These are people who have the capacity and intelligence to be a senior lawyer, politician, or anything in the country, but when it...

Credit Guarantee (Amendment) Bill 2022: Second Stage (Resumed) (9 Nov 2022)

Michael Collins: ...provide security of domestic energy supply by opening up drilling for new oil and gas supplies off our coast. The Ukraine enterprise crisis scheme and other measures will, we hope, help businesses competing internationally and suffering the broader effects of skyrocketing energy costs. However, they will do absolutely nothing to tackle the underlying causes of this crisis. The new...

Written Answers — Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment: Work Permits (27 Oct 2022)

Damien English: With more than 2.5 million people at work in Ireland, the new Employment Permits Bill will allow us to better compete for global talent, to fill labour market gaps, to support local enterprises and to encourage Foreign Direct Investment while at the same time protecting the rights of workers in the State. While the current system is robust, the existing legislation is inflexible in its...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Education and Skills: Future Funding of Higher Education: Discussion (Resumed) (24 May 2022) See 1 other result from this debate

...and the green skills that are emerging. The twin track of sustainability and digitisation is really strong in what we do. The Deputy should not ask me; he should ask the two people present who competed in the competition what they got out of it and how it opened their careers. It encourages other people who are thinking that they can actually represent their country and win the gold,...

Consumer Rights Bill 2022: Second Stage (11 May 2022)

Alan Farrell: ...into the 21st century and, in so doing, make it fit for the increasingly digitised world. The vast majority of the population daily streams or downloads goods or services from the Internet or the cloud. This practice is a clear divergence from the way we lived our lives just a decade ago, or even more recently. Through the past two years of the pandemic, we had no better example of...

Ceisteanna Eile - Other Questions: Foreign Direct Investment (7 Apr 2022)

Leo Varadkar: ...employing more than 4,500 people in technology, life sciences, international financial services and engineering and industrial technologies. In September 2021, ITRenew, a leader in circular cloud and sustainable data centre infrastructure announced it will create 40 jobs in Drogheda, and more recently Becton, Dickinson and Company, BD, announced the creation of 100 additional jobs with a...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Transport, Tourism and Sport: Road Traffic and Roads Bill 2021: Discussion (2 Mar 2022) See 1 other result from this debate

Gerry Horkan: ...is the technological argument as to whether there should be a kind of black box recorder inside scooters that records information on what people are doing all the time and sends it up into the cloud. There is the issue of insurance. We are talking about hire schemes versus private use. The latter sounds like it will be the harder to regulate because the witnesses' companies have users,...

Written Answers — Department of Public Expenditure and Reform: Departmental Reviews (19 Jan 2022)

Michael McGrath: ...and Prospects Quarter 1 2022 Prospects - Ireland’s Pipeline of Major Infrastructure Projects Quarter 1 2022 Supporting Excellence Leadership Group and Skills Competency Framework Quarter 4 2022 Spending Review 2022 (2022 topics / studies to be confirmed) Quarter 3 & 4 2022 ...

Seanad Committee on the Withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union: Rail Connectivity Post Brexit: Aughey Screens (14 Jun 2021)

..., CPOs, interfaces with motorways, electricity pylons and whatever else crosses its path. The north-west corridor is a nice project because there is no rail infrastructure. It will not impede or compete with any other rail infrastructure. It will not have a cloud hanging over it in respect of fears of the private sector taking State assets. As it is a blank sheet, it creates good...

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation: General Scheme of Companies (Corporate Enforcement Authority) Bill 2018 (Resumed): Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (29 Jan 2021)

Leo Varadkar: ...the really big bucks. Potentially, they can command those really big bucks from people who may be breaching these company laws. Quite frankly, it is always a problem with the public service that we are competing with a private sector that can pay really well. When we start paying people in the public service really well, we get understandable criticism from people who are on more modest...

Written Answers — Department of Communications, Climate Action and Environment: Telecommunications Infrastructure (22 Sep 2020)

Eamon Ryan: ...of our country, socially and economically. High speed connectivity will support a broad range of policy priorities and will allow for : the expansion of remote health monitoring and diagnosis; cloud based services and connected devices; digital learning; smart farming; and realisation of the benefits of e-government. Facilitating remote working and innovation opportunities is...

Written Answers — Department of Communications, Climate Action and Environment: Telecommunications Infrastructure (22 Sep 2020)

Eamon Ryan: ...our country, socially and economically. High speed connectivity will support a broad range of policy priorities and will allow for : the expansion of remote health monitoring and diagnosis; cloud based services and connected devices; digital learning; smart farming; and realisation of the benefits of e-government. Facilitating remote working and innovation opportunities is...

Protecting Jobs and Supporting Business: Statements (16 Sep 2020)

Gary Gannon: ...the lessons we learned from the crash in 2008. It meant that workers could maintain a connection with their employment. It was a worthy time in dealing with the pandemic. However, gradually darker clouds have set in and, suddenly, we are no longer all in this together. There are new slogans now. We are now being told that we must learn to live with the virus. Learning to live with...

Ministers and Secretaries and Ministerial, Parliamentary, Judicial and Court Offices (Amendment) Bill 2020: Second Stage (Resumed) (24 Jul 2020)

James Lawless: ...FDI centres. This helped to attract to our shores multinationals and investment in technology, pharma, electronics and many other sectors. No more than now, the DIAS was established at a time when dark clouds were gathered around the world. We were on the brink of the Second World War. Now, we face the Covid pandemic. The parallel is that a Fianna Fáil Taoiseach took the...

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