Innovating through tech in the GCC

About this research

Innovating through tech in the GCC is an Economist Intelligence Unit report, supported by the Bahrain Economic Development Board. The report examines how both local and international companies in the GCC are integrating advanced technologies to offer innovative products and services to the market. 

Putting IoT to work in business operations

There has been a step-change in how companies are using Internet of Things (IoT) technology to assist with internal operations since 2017, The Economist Intelligence Unit’s reveals.

Securing IoT

The Economist Intelligence Unit’s Internet of Things (IoT) Business Index 2020, sponsored by Arm, reveals that IoT adoption has progressed significantly since 2017, both in companies’ internal operations and in their products and services. 

But this progress has come in spite of lingering security concerns, both from consumers and companies themselves. Evidently, companies that wish to pursue IoT strategies must reassure both internal and external stakeholders that they can do so securely. 

The IoT Business Index 2020: a step change in adoption

The latest edition of the IoT Business Index, which has tracked business use of the IoT since 2013, identifies a step forward in adoption, especially in internal operations. 

Great Expectations: Fulfilling the promise of emerging technologies

Great Expectations: Fulfilling the promise of emerging technologies

Recent years have brought glimpses of the vast potential of digitization. IoT platforms that link sensors with predictive analytics software turn airplanes, irrigation systems and manufacturing equipment into prolific data fountains that enable companies to forecast demand more accurately, keep production lines humming, create new revenue streams and meet the ever-changing preferences of consumers. Download our report to learn more. 

What the Internet of Things means for consumer privacy

As the digital era has unfolded, consumers have become steadily more aware of the uses that businesses make of the personal information that is handed over when accessing services. Many consumers have become adept at exercising control over how their data are used, for example through consent forms and opt-outs. However, the IoT—the rapidly expanding network of devices, physical objects, services and applications that communicate over the internet—poses a new set of privacy challenges, as it changes the relationship between individuals and their personal data.

Consumer privacy meets the Internet of Things

What the Internet of Things means for consumer privacy

As the digital era has unfolded, consumers have become steadily more aware of the uses that businesses make of the personal information that is handed over when accessing services. Many consumers have become adept at exercising control over how their data are used, for example through consent forms and opt-outs.

Safe Cities Index 2017: Security in a rapidly urbanising world

In many respects, it’s the very success of cities, in their role as global social and economic hubs, that makes them more vulnerable. As rural residents head for the city in developing countries—which for purposes here we define as non-OECD countries, with the exception of Singapore—and wealthy global capitals draw in international talent, vast demographic shifts are creating cities with previously unimagined population sizes. In 2016, there were 31 megacities—cities with more than 10m inhabitants. This is projected to rise to 41 by 2030.1

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