Skip to main content

Facebook cancels conference, IBM pulls out of RSA over coronavirus worries

Facebook has cancelled its worldwide marketing conference next month in San Francisco, while IBM and an unidentified Canadian company have pulled out of the RSA Conference in San Francisco later this month due to worries about the coronavirus.

“Out of an abundance of caution, we cancelled our global marketing summit due to evolving public health risks related to coronavirus,” Reuters quoted a Facebook spokesman as saying.

As for the RSA conference, IBM said Friday in a tweet that “the health of IBMers is our primary concern as we continue to monitor upcoming events and travel relative to Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19).”

However, RSA conference organizers say the annual event is still scheduled to go on.

The notice from RSA said also said an unidentified Canadian firm has withdrawn. At publication time it isn’t known which Canadian firm that is. Past exhibitors have included large firms such as BlackBerry, but also a number of lesser-known startups that have small booths as part of a trade show pavilion sponsored by the Ontario and Canadian governments.

In an email Sunday evening Mauricio Ospina, the USA area director for information technology at Ontario’s Ministry of Economic Development, said 19 Canadian firms agreed and are still committed to going to the conference.

The total number of exhibitors, including IBM, that have cancelled their participation as an RSA Conference sponsor or exhibitor is eight. Six of them are from China.

RSA Conference is scheduled to start Feb. 23 with tutorials and seminars. It officially kicks off February 25th with opening keynotes.

RSA Conference organizers said in an online notice that as of last Friday approximately 82 per cent of registered attendees are from the United States, as are 82 percent of exhibitors. The travel restrictions imposed by the U.S. Government on January 31st remain in effect, the statement added. It also says that according to the U.S. Center for Disease Control’s situation summary late last week the health risk from coronavirus for the general American public was considered low.

Organizers said the conference will continue to follow the guidance of the CDC and the World Health Organization and is in close communication with the City of San Francisco to monitor all new developments pertaining to the coronavirus.

Last week organizers cancelled the annual Mobile World Congress in Barcelona — also scheduled to start Feb. 23 — after a significant number of companies pulled out including BT (British Telecom), Facebook, Nokia, Ericsson, Intel, Cisco, Amazon, Vodafone and Germany’s Deutsche Telekom.

Cisco Systems cancelled a customer conference in Australia due to the virus. It also dropped plans to bring four foreign reporters, including one from IT World Canada, to cover the RSA Conference as well as a customer day on the conference sidelines.



Udimi - Buy Solo Ads from IT World CanadaIT World Canada https://ift.tt/2HA4JEE
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

9 VCs in Madrid and Barcelona discuss the COVID-19 era and look to the future

Spain’s startup ecosystem has two main hubs: Madrid and Barcelona. Most observers place Barcelona first and Madrid second, but the gap appears to close every year. Barcelona has benefitted from attracting expats in search of sun, beach and lifestyle who tend to produce more internationally minded startups. Madrid’s startups have predominantly been Spain or Latin America-focused, but have become increasingly international in nature. Although not part of this survey, we expect Valencia to join next year, as city authorities have been going all-out to attract entrepreneurs and investors. The overall Spanish ecosystem is generally less mature than those in the U.K., France, Sweden and Germany, but it has been improving at a fast clip. More recently, entrepreneurs in Spain have moved away from emulating success in pursuit of innovative technologies. Following the financial crisis, the Spanish government supported the creation of startups with the launch of FOND-ICO GLOBAL, a €1.5 billi...

How to Stay Creative and Keep SEO in Mind

Information Technology Blog - - How to Stay Creative and Keep SEO in Mind - Information Technology Blog Search engine optimization (SEO) refers to customizing your website’s content to ensure that web browsers give your website a high SEO score. The sites with the highest SEO scores are featured on the search engine’s first page of search results for relevant searches.  71%  of the click-throughs happen with articles listed on the first page of results on the search engine. This means that if your website’s article is the second (or third, or fourth page), it’s less likely the search user will even see your article. You want your article to be ranking as close to the top of the first page of results as possible. In order to have a good SEO score your site’s content needs to feature keywords and relevant phrases. It must be optimized for easy navigation between pages. It also needs to be referenced via external links that drive traffic to your site. Incorporating all of t...

Everything we know about HHS Protect, a secretive government project with Peter Thiel's Palantir that helps brief Trump's coronavirus task force

A secretive project at the US Department of Health and Human Services is working with technology companies to collect and analyze data related to the novel coronavirus .  Dubbed "HHS Protect," the effort tracks information from around the country about coronavirus case numbers, hospital capacity, and even supply chain issues.  HHS uses Palantir Technologies , a data firm cofounded by Peter Thiel, to distill that information for the White House coronavirus task force. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories . A secretive project at the US Department of Health and Human Services is working with technology companies to collect and analyze data related to the novel coronavirus.  Dubbed "HHS Protect," the effort includes roughly 2.5 billion pieces of data from healthcare providers, government officials, and labs around the country about coronavirus case numbers, hospital capacity, and even supply chain issues.  The goal is learn about the progress...