Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

IBM Announces Plan To Create 100 Cybersecurity Jobs In New Brunswick

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Mar, 2016 11:52 AM
    FREDERICTON — IBM plans to create 100 new full-time jobs over the next three year in its cybersecurity division in New Brunswick.
     
    Company officials and Premier Brian Gallant made the announcement today in Fredericton.
     
    Gallant says the expansion of IBM's operations in New Brunswick means valuable information technology jobs and a strong foundation for continued growth in the cybersecurity sector in the province.
     
    The premier met with IBM and other companies earlier this month at a cybersecurity conference in San Francisco.
     
    Gallant says the Fredericton area is already a centre of excellence for cybersecurity but more needs to be done to promote it to others in the industry.
     
    He says the area already has a number of major IT companies like IBM, as well as the University of New Brunswick and CFB Gagetown, who all have an interest in cybersecurity.
     
    In 2011, IBM bought Q1 Labs whose QRadar Security Intelligence Platform was developed in partnership with the University of New Brunswick.
     
    IBM maintains a research development and customer support centre in Fredericton.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    End Of Great Bear Rainforest Grizzly Hunt To Cost First Nations Millions

    End Of Great Bear Rainforest Grizzly Hunt To Cost First Nations Millions
    Premier Christy Clark announced a landmark deal earlier this week to limit logging and end the commercial grizzly hunt on the central coast, which is home to rare, white spirit bears and 1000-year-old cedar forests.

    End Of Great Bear Rainforest Grizzly Hunt To Cost First Nations Millions

    Winnipeg School Bus Driver Loses Job After Relieving Himself In Public

    Winnipeg School Bus Driver Loses Job After Relieving Himself In Public
    A woman called First Student Canada in early January after she saw the driver repeatedly urinating in public.

    Winnipeg School Bus Driver Loses Job After Relieving Himself In Public

    Manitoba Crash Victim Who Crawled Up Snowbank To Save Daughter Loses Feet To Frostbite

    Manitoba Crash Victim Who Crawled Up Snowbank To Save Daughter Loses Feet To Frostbite
    Kristen Hiebert and four-year-old Avery were going home last month when their car slid off a rural highway near a bridge and rolled down a steep slope to the frozen Souris River.

    Manitoba Crash Victim Who Crawled Up Snowbank To Save Daughter Loses Feet To Frostbite

    B.C. Man Faces Cruelty Charges Again After 29 Animals Are Seized

    B.C. Man Faces Cruelty Charges Again After 29 Animals Are Seized
    WINLAW, B.C. — The SPCA has seized more than two dozen animals from a Winlaw-area farm in the Slocan Valley.

    B.C. Man Faces Cruelty Charges Again After 29 Animals Are Seized

    Toyota Discontinues Scion After Years Of Slumping Sales

    Toyota Discontinues Scion After Years Of Slumping Sales
    DETROIT — Toyota is killing its Scion brand after years of slumping sales.

    Toyota Discontinues Scion After Years Of Slumping Sales

    Nunavut Family Wants Inquiry Into Murky Circumstances Of Baby's Death

    Nunavut Family Wants Inquiry Into Murky Circumstances Of Baby's Death
    An inquiry could reveal more details about a health system already heavily criticized in a previous review into the 2012 death of Makibi Timilak.

    Nunavut Family Wants Inquiry Into Murky Circumstances Of Baby's Death