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Capgemini

Coverage of Capgemini in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: May 11 · 18:33 UTCMost recent: Jul 2 · 10:17 UTC
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Recent coverage
  • SECURITYJul 2 · 10:17 UTCTHE HINDU NATIONAL
    Rules governing crèches in India | Explained

    An incident of caregivers abusing toddlers at the 'Little Buds Day Care' on the Capgemini campus has sparked public outrage and raised concerns about safety measures in childcare facilities. The article highlights the need for improved regulations to protect children in such settings.

  • CRIMEJul 2 · 06:08 UTCTHE HINDU NATIONAL
    Allegations of child abuse: Police summon creche staff at Capgemini in Bengaluru for questioning

    Police summoned creche staff at Capgemini in Bengaluru over child abuse allegations. HAL police registered an FIR against workers at Little Buds Day Care on June 29.

  • BUSINESSJun 8 · 13:49 UTCSEMAFOR
    The paradox of Africa's millionaire growth

    Africa's millionaire population is growing faster than the Gulf due to rising commodity prices and resilient private enterprise, but wealthy individuals often move capital abroad due to weak financial systems. Morocco led with 16.8% growth in millionaires, while reports highlight African high-net-worth individuals' focus on wealth protection through diversification and offshore investments.

  • BUSINESSJun 4 · 08:30 UTCTHE REGISTER
    UK tax collector hands Capgemini £600M contact center deal, delays start of £2.4B CRM contract

    The UK’s tax collector, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC), awarded Capgemini a £600 million contact center contract and delayed the start of its £2.4 billion customer relationship management (CRM) contract by three months. The CRM contract, initially set for May 2026, now begins in August 2026, while Capgemini’s contact center deal includes subcontractors Route 101 and Nice Systems.

  • TECHNOLOGYMay 11 · 18:33 UTCTHE REGISTER
    OpenAI can't have incompetent AI consultants ruining the market, so bought its own

    OpenAI is launching a consultancy to help enterprises find value in its AI models and has acquired UK-based AI consulting firm Tomoro to support this endeavor. The new company will operate as a standalone business unit with over $4 billion of investments. OpenAI's goal is to help enterprises justify spending on its models and cover infrastructure costs.

Capgemini · Dossier · The Nexus