David Cameron has openly warned CSC in parliament that the government could consider cancelling all or part of the supplier's £3 billion contract with the NHS, after it assesses forthcoming reviews.
Glencore, the giant Swiss-based commodties trader that is planning to publicly float its shares for the first time this year, is looking to extract better decision making and more consistent processes from a new standardised SAP ERP
The London 2012 Olympics sales website crashed offline last night, after people rushed to buy tickets during the final hours before the deadline.
One year on from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which raised major IT management and spill modelling software questions, BP has vowed to review its safety systems.
Walmart has acquired a social networking firm in a major bid to grow its online and mobile shopping businesses.
The UK will adopt a controversial European Union cookie law after 25 May, the government has announced.
Reckitt Benckiser is facing an £89 million lawsuit from the NHS after allegedly co-ordinating updates of GP prescription software so that the cheap version of its Gaviscon heartburn medicine no longer appeared.
Data on nuclear submarines has been made available on the internet, after a technical error by Whitehall departments.
The administrators of Lehman Brothers' European operations have fully separated its IT from Barclays Capital and Nomura - which bought parts of the collapsed bank in 2008 - as they finalised steps in the remaining businesses to retire what had been cutting edge systems.
The internal email archives of ratings agencies and banks have been thrown open as part of a major government investigation, demonstrating the risk appetite of large Wall Street institutions before the global economic crash.
President Obama has insisted the US government will invest aggressively in rolling out broadband, in spite of major spending cuts in other areas aimed at cutting $4 trillion from the country's deficit over 12 years.
The website of the UK Independent Commission on Banking has been almost entirely offline for two days, since the release of a major government report into stabilising the banking industry.
The New York Stock Exchange and Deutsche Borse are planning a move to a single cash equities trading platform, understood to be based on Red Hat Linux, in a crucial step towards saving 79 million (£64 million) in annual IT costs and delivering robust, fast messaging.
PricewaterhouseCoopers has been fined US$7.5 million over the fraud at Indian outsourcer Satyam.
Julian Assange, the embattled founder of Wikileaks, has been granted an <a href="http://www.computerworlduk.com/news/security/3262541/update-assange-to-be-extradited-to-sweden/">extradition</a> appeal by the High Court.