Iran, Middle East
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Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said Tuesday that it plans to target major U.S. technology companies across the Middle East, including Apple, Microsoft and Google, on Wednesday amid the ongoing war.
After attacks on several Iranian campuses, Iranian forces warn they could target American universities in the region.
Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps added 18 major U.S. companies to its list of possible targets, following Tuesday's deadly strikes on Iranian citizens.
The country's Revolutionary Guard warned that Iran would consider Israeli universities and branches of U.S. universities in the region “legitimate targets” unless offered safety assurances for Iranian universities,
AI and other technologies are changing modern warfare. Iran War illustrates the benefits of commercial technology—especially AI software, space-based sensors and drones.
The officials said the collaboration "almost certainly included technical training on SMIC's semiconductor technology."
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned on Sunday that U.S. universities are “legitimate targets” after alleged U.S.-led attacks on Tehran University of Science and
The United States and Israel see the university as the research hub for Iran’s missile, drone and nuclear programmes.
U.S. and European officials confirm that Russia has started transferring an upgraded batch of Shahed-type drones to Iran — improvements Moscow engineered through extensive battlefield use in Ukraine.
The Iran conflict may help Asian technology shares further outperform their consumer peers, as concerns rise that the war’s inflationary impact will outweigh its damage on artificial intelligence supply chains.
The war in Iran is threatening a small but crucial part of the complex supply chain that helps produce the world’s chips, as the conflict limits access to a large chunk of the world’s helium. Qatar produces about a third of the world’s helium,