This system is only used on ScotRail trains and will not include stations.
There is no suggestion that this group is behind the data breach at Adidas.But the firm revealed earlier this month it had faced data breaches in other parts of its global empire - including its Turkish and South Korean arms.
to follow the world's top tech stories and trends.Passengers on ScotRail trains have been noticing a new voice announcing the station arrivals and some have not been pleased.The new announcer, called Iona, has recently taken over on some routes. But unlike her predecessors, she is not real.
Previously announcements were pre-recorded by a Scottish voice artist, but Iona is a synthetic voice which uses an AI model to deliver typed messages in a "Scottish accent".ScotRail urged passengers to "give it time and it may grow on you".
It said tricky place names such as Milngavie and Achnasheen are inputted phonetically as "Mill-guy" and "Akna-sheen" to help the software avoid embarrassing mistakes.
Although the technology has not yet been fully implemented, some passengers have already voiced their unhappiness with the change.Smaller platforms that do not meet the 45m EU user threshold must also abide by the bloc's digital rules to safeguard children, it said.
Coordinated action by its member states will also seek to enforce requirements for smaller pornography sites."Our priority is to protect minors and allow them to navigate safely online," said Henna Virkkunen, the Commission's executive vice-president for tech sovereignty, security and democracy.
"Together with the Digital Service Coordinators in the Member States we are determined to tackle any potential harm to young online users."Uber has said it is "ready to go" now with driverless taxis in the UK - but the government has put back the date it expects to approve fully self-driving vehicles.