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  • Scientists Detect “Ghost” Proteins That Could Explain Long COVID – SciTechDaily

    1. Scientists Detect “Ghost” Proteins That Could Explain Long COVID  SciTechDaily
    2. Automatic detection of persistent physiological changes after COVID infection via wearable devices with potential for long COVID management  Nature
    3. New biomarker may be the first specific and quantifiable indicator for confirming long COVID  News-Medical
    4. Scientists detect virus traces in blood that may unlock long COVID’s mystery  ScienceDaily

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  • Punjab Finalizes Cost Plan for E-Taxi Service

    Punjab Finalizes Cost Plan for E-Taxi Service

    Punjab has finalized the financing scheme for its e-taxi service, outlining subsidies, down payments, and bank loans to make the project more affordable for drivers.

    The provincial government has taken another step toward rolling out the e-taxi service in Lahore, with Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz approving the financing plan. In the initial phase, around 1,100 vehicles will be introduced under the scheme.

    As part of the cost breakdown, banks will provide loans of up to Rs6.5 million for electric vehicles. The Punjab government will bear the interest cost, while buyers will contribute a subsidized down payment. For vehicles priced between Rs4 million and Rs10 million, the government will pay Rs585,000 on behalf of buyers, with the remaining cost financed through banks.

    Officials said Rs2 billion has been allocated for the project, which will rely on 1,100 Chinese-manufactured electric vehicles in its first stage. To support the e-taxi service, 18 charging stations have already been installed in Lahore, with plans to gradually expand the network.

    The government expects the e-taxi service to lower transportation costs, reduce emissions, and modernize urban mobility in the province. With the financing details finalized, the service is set to provide both economic and environmental benefits.

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  • China to stage massive military parade marking WW2 surrender of Japan

    China to stage massive military parade marking WW2 surrender of Japan




    BEIJING (Reuters) – China will stage a massive military parade next month involving tens of thousands of people in the heart of Beijing to commemorate 80 years since the end of World War Two following the surrender of Japan.

    Hundreds of aircraft including fighter jets and bombers as well as ground equipment, some of which have never been seen in public before, will be featured in the parade, military officials said at a press conference.

    The September 3 parade, the second such procession since 2015 to observe the formal surrender of Japanese forces in 1945, will be a show of China’s military strength as some of its neighbours and Western nations look on with concern over the projection of power by the People’s Liberation Army in recent years.

    From trucks fitted with devices to take out drones, new tanks and early warning aircraft to protect China’s aircraft carriers, military attaches and security analysts say they are expecting China to display a host of new weapons and equipment at the parade.

    Additions to its expanding suite of missiles, particularly anti-ship versions and weapons with hypersonic capabilities, will be particularly closely watched as the US and its allies prepare to counter China in any future regional conflict.

    “(The weapons and equipment) will fully demonstrate our military’s robust ability to adapt to technological advancements, evolving warfare patterns, and win future wars,” Wu Zeke, deputy director of the military parade, told reporters.

    The 70-minute-long “Victory Day” parade, comprising 45 contingents of troops, will be surveyed by President Xi Jinping at Tiananmen Square alongside a number of foreign leaders and dignitaries including Russian President Vladimir Putin, who also attended the 2015 parade.

    At the last World War Two parade, more than 12,000 soldiers, including diverse contingents from Russia and Belarus to Mongolia and Cambodia, marched through the city alongside veterans. Beijing had also mobilised over 500 pieces of military equipment and 200 aircraft.

    Many Western leaders had shunned the 2015 event, wary of the message that China would send with its exhibition of military might. Then Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe declined to attend.

    Foreign attendees at the time included former German chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair.

    Authorities have stepped up security in downtown Beijing since the first rehearsals this month, setting up checkpoints, diverting road traffic and shutting shopping malls and office buildings.

    Beijing has so far conducted two large-scale rehearsals on the weekends of August 9-10 and 16-17, attended by 22,000 and 40,000 people involving troops, police and spectators. 


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  • ‘More affordable’ Xbox Cloud Gaming plan could be on the way, hints Microsoft

    ‘More affordable’ Xbox Cloud Gaming plan could be on the way, hints Microsoft

    Microsoft has suggested that it is considering new ways to make Xbox cloud gaming more affordable for players worldwide, according to a report by The Verge.

    Jason Ronald, vice president of Xbox Gaming Devices and Ecosystem, revealed in the company’s official Xbox podcast that many players currently use Game Pass Ultimate for cloud access, which creates an opportunity to rethink pricing and accessibility.

    “One of the things we see is there’s a lot of players who use Game Pass Ultimate to access the cloud, whether that’s the primary way they play, or an additional way to play on the go,” he said in the report.

    The remarks tie into earlier hints from Microsoft executives about a possible ad-supported model for Xbox cloud gaming.

    Microsoft Gaming CFO Tim Stuart has previously floated the idea of a free version of the service, where players could stream games after watching ads, the report added.

    Currently, Indian gamers pay Rs 829 per month for Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, which includes cloud gaming.

    If Microsoft launches an ad-supported model, players may get access to cloud gaming at no cost, with the only trade-off being periodic advertisements.

    Meanwhile, Microsoft’s rival in the space, Nvidia, is also bolstering its cloud gaming platform. Starting September, Nvidia’s GeForce Now will shift to the Blackwell architecture, bringing RTX 5080-level GPUs, DLSS 4 support, and a wider catalogue of up to 4,500 games.

    The update also improves device-specific experiences, adding 5K resolution on LG OLED monitors and 90fps streaming on the Steam Deck.

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  • ChronODE method offers precision in timing gene therapy treatments

    ChronODE method offers precision in timing gene therapy treatments

    A Yale research team has created a new computer tool that can pinpoint when exactly genes turn on and off over time during brain development – a finding that may one day help doctors identify the optimal window to deploy gene therapy treatments.

    Dubbed “chronODE,” the tool uses math and machine learning to model how gene activity and chromatin (the DNA and protein mix that forms chromosomes) patterns change over time. The tool may offer a variety of applications in disease modelling and basic genomic research and perhaps lead to future therapeutic uses.

    Basically, we have an equation that can determine the precise moment of gene activation, which may dictate important steps such as the transition from one developmental or disease stage to another. Consequently, this may represent a potential way to identify, in the future, critical points for therapeutic intervention.” 


    Mor Frank, postdoctoral associate in the Department of Biophysics and Biochemistry in Yale’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) and study co-author

    Results of the study were published August 19 in the journal Nature Communications.

    For the study, the research team wanted to determine not just when genes activate, but how their activation changes over the course of brain development. Genes activate at different points in cell development, but mapping gene development has been difficult. And past studies have focused on isolated moments in time, not on how gene expression evolves over time.

    In this case, the researchers used a logistic equation (a mathematical equation useful for modelling dynamic processes) to measure when and how rapidly genes turn on and off in developing mouse brains. They found that most genes follow simple and gradual activation patterns, and that genes can be grouped into subtypes, including accelerators that speed up during late stages of development; switchers that speed up and then slow down; and decelerators that just slow down.

    Researchers then developed an AI model to predict gene expression over time based on changes in nearby chromatin. The model worked well, especially for genes with a more complex regulation, and the entire procedure established the chronODE method.

    They found that most genes follow predictable developmental patterns, which are dictated by their role in a cell and determine how quickly they reach maximum influence on the cell.

    “In a situation where you’re treating genetic disease, you’d want to shut down the gene before it reaches its full potential, after which it’s too late,” said co-author Beatrice Borsari, who is also a postdoctoral associate in biophysics and biochemistry.

    “Our equation will tell you exactly the switching point – or the point of no return after which the drug will not have the same effect on the gene’s expression,” Borsari said.

    “There are many cases where it’s not just important to characterize the developmental direction you go, but also how fast you reach a certain point, and that’s what this model is allowing us to do for the first time,” added Mark Gerstein, the Albert L. Williams Professor of Biomedical Informatics at Yale School of Medicine and a professor of molecular biophysics and biochemistry, computer science, and of statistics and data science in FAS, and the study’s lead author.

    Borsari and Frank underscore that the potential applications in the pharmacokinetic area are major.

    Researchers called their new method “chronODE,” a name that merges the concept of time (Chronos is the god of time in Greek mythology) with the mathematical framework of ordinary differential equations (ODEs.)

    “We analyze time-series biological data using the logistic ODE,” Borsari said. “In a sense, the name captures the multidisciplinary nature of our research. We work where biology meets the beauty of math. We use mathematical models to describe and predict complex biological phenomena – in our case, temporal patterns in genomic data.”

    Borsari is a computational biologist with expertise in genetics and bioinformatics, while Frank is a biomedical engineer with a strong foundation in machine learning and mathematics. “Our diverse skills create a highly synergistic collaboration, and we learn a lot from each other,” Borsari said.

    Other study authors include research associates Eve S. Wattenberg, Ke Xu, Susanna X. Liu, and Xuezhu Yu.

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Borsari, B., et al. (2025). The chronODE framework for modelling multi-omic time series with ordinary differential equations and machine learning. Nature Communications. doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-61921-9.

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  • White House joins TikTok as Trump’s deadline looms – samaa tv

    1. White House joins TikTok as Trump’s deadline looms  samaa tv
    2. White House launches TikTok account with Trump saying ‘I am your voice’  Reuters
    3. White House belies need for TikTok shutdown: China Daily editorial  China Daily
    4. The White House is bringing MAGA memes to TikTok  Tubefilter
    5. Trump’s White House takes to TikTok as deadline looms to ban platform  Al Jazeera

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  • Elegant theory explains the chaos of rising gas bubbles

    Elegant theory explains the chaos of rising gas bubbles

    An international research team from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR), Johns Hopkins University and Duke University has discovered that a century-old theory describing turbulence in liquids also applies to a very bubbly problem: namely, how exactly rising bubbles swirl up the water around them. The experiments, in which the researchers tracked individual bubbles and liquid particles in 3D, provide the first direct experimental evidence that so-called “Kolmogorov scaling” can occur in bubble-induced turbulence

    Bubble-induced turbulence occurs in many places: from carbonated beverages to industrial mixing processes to the roaring surf of the sea. When enough bubbles rise through a liquid, their wake sets the surrounding fluid into a complex, turbulent motion. Understanding the rules behind this chaos is crucial to improving industrial designs and climate models. However, one key question has long puzzled researchers: can the mathematical theory of turbulence developed by Russian mathematician Andrei Kolmogorov in 1941 – known as “K41 scaling” – be applied to flows in which bubbles drive the motion? Until now, the answer was unclear due to contradictory results from experiments and computer simulations.

    “We wanted to get a definitive answer by closely examining the turbulence between and around the bubbles on very small scales,” says Dr. Tian Ma, lead author of the study and physicist at the Institute of Fluid Dynamics at the HZDR. To achieve this, the researchers used an advanced 3D Lagrangian tracking method of both phases – a technique that allows both the bubbles and tiny marker particles in the surrounding fluid to be tracked in real time and with high precision. The experimental setup comprised an 11.5 cm wide water column into which a large number of gas bubbles were introduced from below in a controlled manner. Four high-speed cameras recorded the events at 2500 frames per second.

    The researchers investigated four different cases, varying the bubble size and gas volume to simulate realistic bubble flows. The decisive factor was that the bubbles, with a diameter of three to five millimetres, were large enough to enter into irregular oscillations as they rose, generating strong turbulent wake flows. In two of the four cases – those with moderate bubble size and density – the turbulence in the flow closely matched Kolmogorov’s predictions on a small scale, that is, for vortices smaller than the bubbles. This is the first time that such scaling has been experimentally confirmed in the middle of a bubble swarm.

    Deciphering turbulence: energy cascades from large to small

    “Kolmogorov’s theory is elegant. It describes how energy transitions from large turbulent eddies to smaller and smaller ones, where it is eventually lost through frictional effects – and how this process controls the fluctuations of turbulent flow motion,” explains co-author Dr. Andrew Bragg from Duke University. “The realization that this theory also describes bubble-driven turbulence so well is both surprising and exciting.”

    The team also developed a new mathematical formula to estimate the rate at which turbulence loses energy due to viscous effects, known as the energy dissipation rate. Their formula, which depends on only two bubble-related parameters – their size and the density of the bubbles – agreed remarkably well with the experimental data. Interestingly, they found that Kolmogorov scaling was stronger in regions outside the direct wake of the bubbles. In these wake regions, the fluid is so strongly disturbed that the classical turbulent energy cascade is masked or dominated by the strong disturbances.

    A key finding is that for Kolmogorov’s classical “inertial range” – where his scaling laws work best – much larger bubbles would be required for this range to be clearly recognizable in bubble-induced turbulence. But there’s a catch: in reality, bubbles of this size would burst due to their own instability. This means that there is a fundamental limit to how well the K41 theory can be applied to bubble-containing flows. “In some ways, nature prevents us from achieving perfect Kolmogorov turbulence with bubbles. But under the right conditions, we now know that it approaches it,” explains Dr. Hendrik Hessenkemper, co-author of the study who conducted the experiments.

    The results not only settle an ongoing scientific debate, but could also help engineering to better design bubble-based systems, from chemical reactors to wastewater treatment. And on the physics side, it adds another system to the growing list of chaotic phenomena where Kolmogorov’s 1941 theory proves surprisingly robust: bubble flows.

    The team emphasizes that the study is just the beginning. Future work could address the question of how turbulence behaves in even more complex bubble shapes, bubble mixtures or under other gravity or fluid conditions. “The better we understand the basic rules of turbulence in bubble flows, the better we can use them in real applications,” summarizes Ma. “And it’s pretty amazing that a theory that was put forward over 80 years ago still holds up in such a bubbly environment.”

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  • Stoxx 600, FTSE and UK inflation data

    Stoxx 600, FTSE and UK inflation data

    Borough Market in London, United Kingdom, on Aug. 27, 2024.

    Mike Kemp | In Pictures | Getty Images

    LONDON — European stocks are expected to open lower on Wednesday as global market sentiment wavered.

    The U.K.’s FTSE index is seen opening 0.18% lower, Germany’s DAX 0.6% lower, France’s CAC 40 down 0.56% and Italy’s FTSE MIB 0.56% lower.

    Regional bourses traded higher on Tuesday as global markets reacted broadly positively to the outcome of talks between U.S. President Donald Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders at the White House on Monday. Defense stocks were among the worst performers in the index, however.

    On the data front, the U.K. inflation print for July will be published at 7 a.m. London time. Economists polled by Reuters had anticipated inflation would reach 3.7% in the twelve months to July, after it picked up to a hotter than expected 3.6% in June.

    Earnings come from Alcon and Geberit and Sweden’s Riksbank publishes its latest monetary policy decision.

    Globally, Asia-Pacific markets fell overnight, tracking Wall Street declines in Tuesday’s trading session. S&P 500 futures were near flat overnight ahead of the release of the Federal Reserve’s July meeting minutes.

    At the time, policymakers once more held steady on interest rates, but Fed Governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman dissented, marking the first time two voting Fed officials have done so since 1993.

    Traders are also focusing on key speeches from Fed officials when they convene in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, for the Fed’s annual economic symposium on Thursday. Investors are awaiting clues from Fed Chair Jerome Powell as to what will happen at the central bank’s remaining policy meetings this year.

    The Fed funds futures market is indicating an 84.9% chance for a quarter-point rate cut at the Fed’s next policy meeting in September, according to CME’s FedWatch tool.

    — CNBC’s Alex Harring contributed to this report.

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  • ‘Don’t call this racist’: row grows over motives behind England flag campaign | England

    ‘Don’t call this racist’: row grows over motives behind England flag campaign | England

    “This is NOT racist never has been never will be,” reads the fundraising page of a group calling itself the Wythall Flaggers, which by Tuesday afternoon had raised more than £2,000, mostly in small donations of £5 and £10. “We have members of the community of all ethnicities and religions stopping by and praising what we are doing so please don’t call this racist.”

    The money, according to the page’s organiser, will be used for “coating the local community in England flags as this is home and we should be patriotic and proud … We need help to cover every street in Wythall with our beautiful St George’s cross.”

    If only all in the Worcestershire village, south of Birmingham, agreed. Footage posted on social media earlier this week claims to show an elderly couple using a ladder to remove the English national flag from a lamp-post in the village. One comment on social media reads: “Traitors.”

    Just weeks after many people in England united around its national flag as the country’s female football team won the European championships, the cross of St George and the British union jack are being raised again in communities across the country. This time however, it is part of an increasingly organised campaign that claims to be purely about patriotism but which many fear – amid a climate of anti-migrant protests and rising far-right activity – could be much more divisive and dangerous.

    Another flag flies above a residential street in Birmingham. Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty Images

    “Let’s bring back patriotism once and for all,” reads the Facebook page of Operation Raise the Colours, which urges members to post images of the assorted national flags of the four British nations “being raised around our great towns and cities”. Users from Walsall and Coventry and Redditch have posted images of flags on lamp-posts and painted on mini-roundabouts and folded in piles ready for deployment.

    “In case anyone needs flags Temu has them,” wrote one poster. Amazon has a deal on flagpoles, suggested another. A third posted a plea that the union flag be hung the right way up.

    However anti-racism campaigners say they have concerns about the motivation and timing of the movement. “We are concerned that the discussion around the English flag and patriotism is giving cover for racism driven by the far right, and – shamefully – by politicians of all shades,” said Lewis Nielsen, anti-fascist officer at Stand Up to Racism. “We do feel the movement is quite dangerous and comes at a tipping point where the far right is trying to build.”

    Having apparently grown out of efforts last month in the Birmingham suburbs of Weoley Castle and Northfield, flag-flying has gathered pace in the city and elsewhere, attracting controversy – and wider political and media attention – after the city council said it would remove banners and flags from lamp-posts as part of a plan to upgrade to LED lighting. Flags have been hung in neighbourhoods across the city, with social media posts claiming “patriotic people” were putting new banners up on lamp-posts as quickly as local authority staff removed them.

    The union flag is also being raised in communities across the country. Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty Images

    The council has said it has no policy of removing flags, saying it “proudly” flew the union flag outside the Council House every day. “When it comes to items attached to lamp-posts, it is normal council procedure for these to be removed on a regular basis … As has always been the case, people are free to fly or hang flags from their homes or gardens, but we ask that they are not attached to street furniture.”

    Many self-described patriots remain outraged, however, and the controversy gathered further pace after the London borough of Tower Hamlets, which has been a flashpoint for anti-migrant protests, confirmed this week that it was removing St George flags from lamp-posts. The 12 councils controlled by Reform jointly pledged on Monday that they would not take down union or St George flags, calling them “symbols of unity and inclusion”.

    Tower Hamlets council said said: “While we recognise people wish to express their views, we have a responsibility to monitor and maintain council infrastructure. Where flags are attached to council-owned infrastructure without permission, they may be removed as part of routine maintenance.”

    Asked about the issue on Tuesday, Keir Starmer’s official spokesperson said the prime minister was a “patriot” who believed people should “absolutely” fly the British and English flags, later clarifying that he was not familiar with events in Birmingham or Tower Hamlets.

    “The PM’s always been clear about his pride in Britain, reflected in the fact we often have the St George’s flag, and other flags, flying in Downing Street.”

    Meanwhile Operation Raise the Colours has ambitions to spread further. “Over 800 people in less than 40 hours is impressive and shows people’s passion for this,” an admin posted on the group on Tuesday. “We ideally need to be organising into local Groups and hitting areas en mass [sic].. As many as possible in as little time as possible.”

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  • Uniting Financial Services, Australia Subscribes to Infosys Finacle’s Digital Banking SaaS Suite on AWS Cloud

    Infosys Finacle, part of EdgeVerve Systems, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Infosys (NSE, BSE, NYSE: INFY), today announced its collaboration with Uniting Financial Services (UFS), a charitable development fund in Australia, to implement the next-gen Finacle Digital Banking Suite. The move from UFS’ incumbent platform to Finacle Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) on AWS cloud was completed in less than five months. This was enabled by the Finacle Australian Reference Bank Model – a solution with preconfigured products, processes, interfaces, and compliance rules. The implemented Finacle Digital Banking Suite includes the Finacle Core Banking, Finacle Digital Engagement Hub, Finacle Online Banking, Finacle Mobile Banking, Finacle Customer Data Hub, and Finacle Alerts.

    This collaboration will enable UFS to transform its operations, helping enhance business agility, compliance, and operational efficiency. It will also help UFS to provide a world-class digital experience for its customer base, introduce new offerings faster and scale seamlessly, in line with its purpose-driven growth strategy.

    In addition, the next-gen Finacle Digital Banking Suite will enable UFS to:

    • Deliver richer digital experiences through intuitive, omnichannel self-service capabilities across mobile and online platforms.
    • Expand its investment product offerings, scale deposits, and grow its commercial loan business.
    • Connect with partners easily through open APIs, driving both innovation and operational gains.
    • Unlock resilience, on-demand scalability and reliable performance with cloud-native SaaS services and AWS infrastructure.
    • Build a secure, cloud-native banking environment leveraging several AWS services including Amazon RDS for backend databases, Amazon EKS for managed Kubernetes, and AWS WAF for firewall protection.

    John McComb, Chief Risk Officer and Acting CEO, Uniting Financial Services, said: “We are delighted to announce the successful go-live of the Finacle platform. Our goal was to modernise our core banking and digital capabilities to enhance the experience for clients. With Infosys Finacle, we have found a long-term technology partner, with the ability to deliver a future-ready platform that meets the needs of our operations today and supports our ambitions for tomorrow in a rapidly evolving financial services landscape.”

    Jamie Simon, Director, Banking and Financial Services (A/NZ), AWS, said, “Our collaboration with Infosys Finacle demonstrates AWS’s commitment to helping financial institutions modernise and innovate to deliver business value. Uniting Financial Services reinforces how AWS’s secure and resilient cloud infrastructure enables financial services organisations to transform their banking operations and enhance digital experiences for customers. We’re proud to support UFS in their mission to deliver purpose-led financial services.”

    Sajit Vijayakumar, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys Finacle, said, “We are delighted to collaborate with Uniting Financial Services on their transformation journey. Going live on Finacle SaaS in record time is a testament to our commitment to modern banking and customer-centric innovation. This rapid deployment underscores the power of a truly digital, cloud-native platform that’s built for agility, compliance, and scale. For community banks in the region looking to modernize without the pain of legacy transformation, this is proof that next-gen banking is not just possible – it’s achievable, fast.”

     

    About Infosys Finacle

    Finacle is an industry leader in digital banking solutions. We are a unit of EdgeVerve Systems, a wholly-owned product subsidiary of Infosys (NSE, BSE, NYSE: INFY). We partner with emerging and established financial institutions to help inspire better banking. Our cloud-native solution suite and SaaS services help banks engage, innovate, operate, and transform better to scale digital transformation with confidence. Finacle solutions address the core banking, lending, digital engagement, payments, cash management, wealth management, treasury, analytics, AI, and blockchain requirements of financial institutions. Today, banks in over 100 countries rely on Finacle to help more than a billion people and millions of businesses to save, pay, borrow, and invest better. For more information, visit www.finacle.com.

     

    Safe Harbor

    Certain statements in this release concerning our future growth prospects, or our future financial or operating performance, are forward-looking statements intended to qualify for the ‘safe harbor’ under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, which involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those in such forward-looking statements. The risks and uncertainties relating to these statements include, but are not limited to, risks and uncertainties regarding the execution of our business strategy, increased competition for talent, our ability to attract and retain personnel, increase in wages, investments to reskill our employees, our ability to effectively implement a hybrid work model, economic uncertainties and geo-political situations, technological disruptions and innovations such as artificial intelligence (“AI”), generative AI, the complex and evolving regulatory landscape including immigration regulation changes, our ESG vision, our capital allocation policy and expectations concerning our market position, future operations, margins, profitability, liquidity, capital resources, our corporate actions including acquisitions, and cybersecurity matters. Important factors that may cause actual results or outcomes to differ from those implied by the forward-looking statements are discussed in more detail in our US Securities and Exchange Commission filings including our Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2025. These filings are available at www.sec.gov. Infosys may, from time to time, make additional written and oral forward-looking statements, including statements contained in the Company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and our reports to shareholders. The Company does not undertake to update any forward-looking statements that may be made from time to time by or on behalf of the Company unless it is required by law.

     

    Media contacts:

    For further information, please contact: PR_Global@infosys.com

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