Business & Technology
Spitfire launches live cyber attack map after 71,793 probes
Spitfire Network Services has launched a live cyber attack map.
The tracker recorded 71,793 attack attempts against a single public IP address over the past 24 hours.
Based on a honeypot system exposed to the internet, the map is intended to show the volume of automated attacks directed at publicly accessible addresses. Spitfire has made the tracker publicly available after first developing it for internal use.
According to figures published by Spitfire, the system logged 1,978 attacks an hour and 27 attacks a minute over the period measured. The attacks are also broken down by location, although apparent origin points may not reflect the true location of those behind them because temporary virtual machines can be used to disguise activity.
Attack volume
The figures offer a snapshot of how frequently internet-facing infrastructure is scanned and tested by automated tools. Honeypots are commonly used in cyber security to attract suspicious traffic and observe attack patterns without exposing production systems.
Harry Bowlby, Managing Director of Spitfire Network Services, said the decision to publish the tool was intended to make that activity more visible. “We originally developed this tracker internally, but we felt now was the right time to make it public so people can see just how active cyber attackers really are.
“The volume of attacks is startling. Every organisation with a public-facing IP address is constantly being probed by automated tools searching for vulnerabilities. Business leaders need to understand that exposure to the internet means being targeted.”
Business risk
The map is designed to highlight the risks attached to publicly exposed devices and services. Spitfire argues that once attackers gain access to one device, they may try to move through a wider network and remain undetected before launching a more damaging attack.
“The risk to any organisation could quite literally upend their business. Once an attacker has access to a single device on a network, they can use that to infiltrate other devices.
“In the worst-case scenario, malicious actors may ensure the vulnerability remains unnoticed for as long as possible before potentially launching a ransomware attack. That can be business-critical because of the interruption to operations, the cost of recovering lost data, restoring damaged IT systems and, if paid, the cost of the ransom itself.
“This is a major reason why the secure private networking across fixed line, mobile and cloud offered by Spitfire’s One Network is such an industry-leading solution for businesses,” Bowlby said.
The company provides voice, internet, internet of things and wide area connectivity services. It added that attacks shown on the map appear in large part to originate from the US, while cautioning that attackers may be masking their real location.
Spitfire has operated from central London for 35 years. The business says it has annual turnover of more than GBP £23 million and employs more than 100 staff.
Business & Technology
UK workers spend more time on admin than European peers
Ricoh UK has published research showing that UK workers spend more time on administrative tasks than employees in other surveyed European markets. The study found that UK workers spend 31% of their time on non-core admin.
The research covered workers in the UK, France, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands and Germany. Italy recorded the lowest share of time spent on admin at 21%.
The UK ranked ahead of Spain at 29%, Germany at 27%, France at 26%, and the Netherlands at 23%. UK office workers surveyed reported losing 15 hours a week to administrative work, or nearly two working days.
Only 51% of UK office workers surveyed said they spend most of their day on tasks that deliver direct value. The research also pointed to growing pressure on retention, with 15% saying they had considered leaving their organisation because of admin burdens alone.
Workplace Strain
The study suggests the issue is affecting team relationships as well as productivity. In the UK, 19% of workers said admin creates conflict or tension within their team, while 16% said they feel resentful towards colleagues with lighter admin loads.
Just 21% said administrative work is distributed equally, and 16% reported generational tension, with younger colleagues seen as resisting such tasks. Nearly a quarter, or 24%, said admin limits their productivity, while 21% said it leaves them less motivated or disengaged. Another 19% said it stifles their creativity.
Across Europe, 48% of employees surveyed said they were considering a new role within the next 12 months. The UK findings indicate admin is one of several pressures shaping how employees view their working day and their employer.
Ricoh also found a gap between how workers view the problem and how they think managers respond. Only 20% of UK workers said they feel their employer cares about admin overload, while 27% said managers underestimate the time it consumes.
Technology Questions
The research comes as businesses continue to review the role of automation and artificial intelligence in office work. In Ricoh’s survey, 34% of respondents reported feeling anxious about the prospect of being replaced.
Uncertainty over how technology will be introduced can add to frustration in workplaces already dealing with heavy administrative demands. The figures suggest the debate is not only about job redesign, but also about employer communication and staff confidence.
Ed MacArthur, Practise Lead – Process Automation at Ricoh UK, said: “UK organisations have pushed hard on digital transformation over the past decade, but that investment hasn’t always translated into simpler workflows for employees. Instead, many are dealing with layers of systems, reporting requirements and compliance processes that sit alongside their core role. That creates duplication, manual workarounds and a heavier administrative load than in markets where processes are either more standardised or less fragmented.”
He said the issue also reflected a mismatch between employee expectations and workplace systems.
Time Reclaimed
MacArthur added, “There is also a clear expectation gap. UK employees are used to consumer-grade technology in their personal lives and expect the same level of ease and integration at work. When workplace tools fall short or when automation is introduced without being properly embedded into day-to-day workflows, it adds friction. The result is a disconnect between the technology organisations believe they’ve invested in and the reality employees experience.”
The survey also asked workers what lighter admin loads would mean for their working lives. Nearly a third (31%) said they would enjoy their job more if they had more freedom to focus on creative tasks.
Another 30% said they would use the time to recharge, while 28% said they would invest it in learning new skills. These responses suggest employees see administrative work not only as a drain on time, but also as a barrier to development, recovery and engagement.
MacArthur said, “When a large share of the week is taken up by repetitive admin, it quickly drains motivation and limits the time people can spend on meaningful work. As the pressure builds, for some, it becomes a reason to look elsewhere. At the same time, uncertainty around AI is adding to the strain. Without clear communication and investment in skills, technology risks creating anxiety rather than confidence, especially as organisations add too many tools. Retention comes down to whether people feel supported and see a future for themselves in the company.”
Business & Technology
ICO launches privacy campaign for parents of children
The Information Commissioner’s Office has launched a public awareness campaign to help parents support children in making safer choices online. It is the regulator’s largest campaign focused on child online privacy.
Macclesfield-based design agency Nexer Digital designed and built the campaign’s online hub as the ICO’s digital delivery partner. Called Switched on to privacy, the campaign targets parents and carers of primary school-aged children and is built around the prompt “chat, choose, check”.
Research cited by the ICO found that 75% of parents are concerned their children are not making safe decisions online. The campaign aims to encourage more regular conversations about privacy between adults and children.
The online hub was built within the ICO’s existing website infrastructure. Project details show the work began in December 2025 and was delivered in two phases, starting with a mobile-first prototype tested with parents and carers before being developed into a live service.
The service runs on the ICO’s existing Umbraco platform. It was built to WCAG 2.2 Level AA accessibility standards and includes features already used across the regulator’s site, such as Welsh language translation and site search, while maintaining a separate campaign identity.
Digital build
The campaign also sits alongside the ICO’s Children’s code, which requires organisations to prioritise children’s privacy and apply high levels of data protection by default. Alongside raising awareness, the initiative is intended to influence behaviour by giving parents practical tools and guidance they can use.
Nexer Digital also added analytics tools to show how users interact with campaign material. The ICO can track activity including downloads, bookmarks and shares to identify which resources are most useful to parents preparing for conversations about online privacy.
Simon Wissink, Account Director and Partner Manager at Nexer Digital, said: “Working with the ICO on such an important and high-profile campaign has been a valuable opportunity for our team. The challenge was to create an experience that is not only accessible and easy to use but genuinely empowers parents to take action. Through user research and iterative design, we’ve built a platform that supports meaningful engagement and can evolve with future campaigns.”
The project adds to a broader relationship between the two organisations, with Nexer Digital serving as the ICO’s digital delivery partner since 2025. Founded in 2007 and formerly known as Sigma, the agency works across research, design and development projects for public, private and not-for-profit organisations.
Parent focus
This campaign focuses on parents of younger children rather than children themselves. By targeting primary school-aged users, the ICO is addressing a stage when many families are beginning to engage more regularly with apps, games, connected devices and online services used by children.
Craig Wyna, Head of Digital at the ICO, said: “Switched on to privacy is about giving parents the confidence and tools they need to support their children in navigating the digital world safely. Nexer Digital has played a key role in bringing this vision to life through a platform that is accessible, engaging and built around user needs.”
The scale of the campaign is notable for the ICO, which has increasingly combined regulation with public-facing education on data use and privacy. The 75% figure from the campaign research underlines the level of concern among parents about children’s online decision-making and gives the regulator a clear public information brief.
For Nexer Digital, the project also reflects demand for digital public services that combine accessibility standards, user testing and measurement tools in a single service. The campaign hub was designed not only to host guidance but also to give the ICO a clearer view of how people use the content, including whether they save or share it.
The agency is part of the wider Nexer Group, a Swedish technology company with more than 2,300 staff worldwide. In the UK, it has worked with organisations including NHS England, AstraZeneca and the Department for Education.
The campaign is intended to help parents have regular privacy conversations with their children using the “chat, choose, check” framework.
Business & Technology
Your.Cloud acquires Pure Cloud Solutions in UK push
Your.Cloud has acquired Pure Cloud Solutions, expanding its presence in the UK market.
Pure Cloud Solutions is a managed IT and telecoms provider based in Tamworth. It serves businesses across the West Midlands and elsewhere in the UK and Europe, and will continue to trade under its existing name with its current team and leadership.
The acquisition adds another UK business to a group that operates through more than 40 companies across several European countries. Your.Cloud employs about 1,500 people and generates annual turnover of more than €350 million.
Your.Cloud backs local managed service providers while allowing them to keep their brands and customer relationships. Pure Cloud Solutions will continue to be led by Chief Executive Officer Jamie Lake.
The Tamworth company was founded in 1990 by Martin Lake and Darren Lake. It began in telephony and structured cabling before expanding into cloud, connectivity and managed IT services over more than three decades.
UK expansion
The deal is part of Your.Cloud’s push to build a broader managed services business in the UK and Europe. Financial terms were not disclosed.
For Pure Cloud Solutions, the acquisition comes as demand in the IT services market continues to shift, particularly around cybersecurity and artificial intelligence. The company said day-to-day customer relationships would remain unchanged after it joins the group.
Jamie Lake, Chief Executive Officer of Pure Cloud Solutions, said: “We’ve spent over 35 years building something we’re proud of – a business that genuinely knows its clients and delivers without the nonsense. Joining Your.Cloud lets us keep doing exactly that, while giving us the backing to move faster and offer more. The market is changing quickly, particularly around AI and cybersecurity, and being part of the Your.Cloud group gives us the platform to stay ahead of it. Nothing changes for our clients in terms of who they deal with – but a lot more becomes possible.”
Local model
Your.Cloud has built its business through a decentralised model focused on acquiring and supporting managed service providers in local markets. Those businesses keep their identities while drawing on shared expertise and resources across the group.
That approach has helped it build a network of companies serving more than 25,000 businesses across Europe in areas including workspace, security, infrastructure and connectivity. Pure Cloud Solutions now joins that portfolio as Your.Cloud seeks to expand further in the UK.
Nils Vermeulen, who oversees the TICTS segment at the group, said Pure Cloud Solutions fits the type of business Your.Cloud wants to add in the market. He cited its customer relationships and management team as key reasons for the acquisition.
Nils Vermeulen, General Manager of the TICTS Segment at Your.Cloud, said: “Jamie and his team have built a genuinely strong business – one with deep client relationships and a clear sense of what good service looks like. That’s exactly the kind of business we look to partner with. Pure Cloud Solutions’ track record and entrepreneurial leadership make them a valuable addition as we continue to expand across the UK. We’re delighted to welcome them to the group.”
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