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Today’s Storystream

Amazon has secured 348 acres in Becker, Minnesota, previously part of Xcel Energy’s Sherco site, for $73.6 million to build a data center. The project, expected to generate 1,200 construction jobs and 100 permanent roles, aligns with Becker’s transition from coal-powered energy to a sustainable tech hub. Becker’s local economy stands to gain from Amazon’s substantial investment in this renewable-focused data center expansion.

Microsoft has confirmed that certain Windows Server 2019 and 2022 systems unexpectedly upgraded to Windows Server 2025, reportedly due to third-party patch tools. Although Microsoft marked the issue as “mitigated,” administrators must handle licensing fees and restore from backups since Microsoft has not released a rollback tool. The company advised users to verify update configurations and is working with third-party providers to streamline future processes.

Radware secured a multimillion-dollar contract with a leading U.S. CPaaS provider, enhancing its cybersecurity with hybrid Cloud DDoS Protection, FWaaS, and Network Analytics. With these solutions, Radware will streamline the provider’s global infrastructure security, reducing response time and safeguarding legitimate traffic across over 500 networks. This strategic upgrade reflects Radware’s commitment to high-speed, low-latency security tailored to evolving DDoS threats.

European cyber tech firm Filigran raised $35 million in a Series B round led by Insight Partners to expand its open-source XTM suite, which includes platforms like OpenCTI and OpenBAS. With this new funding, Filigran will enhance AI-driven cybersecurity tools and drive its global presence in the US and Pacific regions, empowering organizations like Airbus, the FBI, and the European Commission in proactive threat management.

Microsoft has launched Azure Cobalt 100 VMs, its first in-house 64-bit Arm-based virtual machines, delivering up to 50% better price-performance. Available in various regions, these VMs power general-purpose and memory-intensive workloads with 96 vCPUs and up to 672 GiB RAM. Early adopters like Snowflake report substantial performance gains, marking a new era in high-efficiency cloud solutions for diverse global workloads.

Lightbits Labs, the innovator of NVMe over TCP, now brings its high-performance, resilient storage solutions to Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI). Certified on OCI, Lightbits empowers latency-sensitive applications—like AI/ML and real-time analytics—with sub-millisecond latency and seamless scaling. Recent benchmarks achieved 3 million 4K read IOPS, ensuring OCI customers unmatched speed, reliability, and cost-efficiency for enterprise workloads in the cloud.

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