Uber hires Google veteran for senior engineering post

This file photo taken on September 13, 2016 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, shows a driver looking from an Uber self-driving car. (AFP)
Updated 21 January 2017
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Uber hires Google veteran for senior engineering post

SAN FRANCISO: Ride-hailing company Uber Technologies Inc. has hired the man behind Google search to work closely with Chief Executive Travis Kalanick and help grow the company’s self-driving car program.
Amit Singhal announced on his personal blog on Friday that he would join Uber after 15 years at Alphabet Inc., where he led Google’s search division. Singhal will take the post of senior vice president of engineering, an Uber spokesman said, a role, which oversees the company’s marketplace and mapping efforts — the core of Uber’s business. He will also act as an adviser to both Kalanick and Anthony Levandowski, who heads Uber’s self-driving program.
In his blog post, Singhal said he was excited for the engineering challenges Uber is tackling and called the company “a geek’s candy store.”
“And do not even get me started on how interesting and exciting self-driving is for a computer scientist,” he wrote.
Uber debuted its self-driving car pilot in Pittsburgh, in September. It launched a second fleet in San Francisco last month, but a feud with California regulators over Uber’s failure to obtain proper permitting compelled the company to take its autonomous testing cars off the streets.
Uber then packed up its cars and brought them to Arizona, where there are no special regulations for autonomous testing.
Singhal announced his departure from Google nearly a year ago, and said his next career move would involve philanthropy. He founded the Singhal Foundation, which aims to provide education to underprivileged children in India.


UAE thwarts terrorist cyberattacks targeting vital sectors

Updated 22 February 2026
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UAE thwarts terrorist cyberattacks targeting vital sectors

DUBAI: The UAE successfully prevented terrorist cyberattacks that targeted the country’s digital infrastructure and vital sectors, in an attempt to destabilize the nation and disrupt essential services, state news agency WAM reported.

The UAE Cybersecurity Council said the attacks included attempts to infiltrate networks, deploy ransomware, and conduct systematic phishing campaigns targeting national platforms.

It also involved the exploitation of artificial intelligence technologies to develop sophisticated offensive tools, reflecting a qualitative shift in the methods employed by terrorist groups and their ability to harness modern technologies to carry out digital attacks, WAM reported.

The Council reiterated the country’s national cybersecurity defense system makes sure that the safety of individuals, the protection of personal data and the continuity of critical services remain top priorities.

It further urged the public to report any cyber threats or suspicious attempts to ensure digital security in the country.