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Commented by Stefan Feulner on April 20th, 2022 | 11:34 CEST

SAP, Kleos Space, TeamViewer - Profiting from technological progress

  • Space
  • bigdata

It is a first in world history. The currently ongoing Ukraine conflict is the first major war in which commercially available satellite imagery plays an important role in providing information about troop movements, military buildups in neighboring countries, and refugee flows. These images are provided by private satellite companies, which provide global geolocation data as a service using AI-powered technology and deliver it to customers such as governments, intelligence agencies or insurance companies. The market for satellite-based data is growing enormously, and company valuations still promise significant upside potential.

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Commented by Armin Schulz on February 21st, 2022 | 13:48 CET

Palantir, Kleos Space, Lufthansa - Security as a megatrend

  • Space
  • bigdata

The topic of security is becoming increasingly important in all areas of our lives. Whether it is building security, corona measures, IT security or retail security companies, almost all areas have been growing for years. In recent times, there are always new crises to master, such as the refugee crisis, the Corona Crisis or currently the Ukraine crisis. People have a permanent feeling of insecurity. The more digital the world becomes, the more critical security for companies and states becomes. Today, we look at three companies for which security is important.

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Commented by André Will-Laudien on February 18th, 2022 | 11:15 CET

Palantir Technologies, Kleos Space, TeamViewer - The next data hype is coming!

  • Space
  • bigdata

In a political conflict like the current one between Russia-Ukraine and the rest of the world, the availability of accurate movement data would be a real asset. However, military data is guarded by governments like a holy grail - especially troop movement data is a hot commodity. In terms of consumer tracking and communications, data is already the most important element of the digitized world. What matters is when what content is seen on which channels and who is sitting in front of the end device. Here is a selection of data specialists with distinctive entry points.

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Commented by André Will-Laudien on December 30th, 2020 | 07:00 CET

Deutsche Bank, Palantir, wallstreet:online - Data Odyssey 2021

  • Big data

Every day, a single person generates about 1.7 MB of data. We are creating and publishing more information than at any other time in human history. At this rate, we can expect the Big Data market to reach 40 trillion gigabytes by the end of the year. That's more data than most of us can even begin to imagine. It includes everything from the pictures you upload to social media, to the comments we post somewhere and everything in between. A certain amount of this data won't be useful to anyone. But there is a lot of valuable data out there, especially if companies evaluate and use it commercially. Social media is a mecca for data collectors - used for credit scores, user profiles and advertising. Data protection has now been regulated by law - but most users give their data voluntarily.

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Commented by André Will-Laudien on November 2nd, 2020 | 09:41 CET

wallstreet:online, Apple, Facebook: The kings of the data world

  • Big data

That was a rain of numbers last week. Almost all technology companies reported their figures for the third quarter - the absolute negative outlier was SAP. After a small sales warning for its cloud business, the share price slumped by 27% over the week and, at EUR 90, almost reached the level of the March correction. Overall, it was not a good week for technology stocks worldwide. A whole 5% sent down the most watched NDX with the popular FAANG shares. Apple and Facebook, the absolute investor favourites, have built dangerous chart technical summit formations, while the German wallstreet:online AG shines with good figures and a delightful stock split.

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