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Technology – Silicon Republic

Quantexa opens new Dublin office and R&D centre EU agrees to simpler AI rules and complete ‘nudification’ ban Tissue repair therapy Substrato wins best pitch at EI Start-Up Day Major European markets still lagging on salary transparency, finds report Anthropic joins forces with SpaceX for Colossus capacity Enterprise Ireland pumped €33m into home-grown start-ups in 2025 Coimisiún na Meán opens investigation into Meta’s content promotion German quantum computing start-up Eleqtron raises €57m Dublin’s GridBeyond to support energy efficiency with new global headquarters What’s the difference between IT and OT security? Coinbase cuts 14pc of jobs to save costs and embrace AI National research partnership to examine flexible work and Ireland’s economy Anthropic, Blackstone, Goldman Sachs to create AI services company Meta bags Assured Robot Intelligence to further humanoid plans Opinion: Why ISO 27001 alone won't save your data from itself Spotify unveils verified badge to distinguish humans from AI Cork’s Nexalus teams with TuffTek for next-gen cooling systems Dublin’s Version 1 to acquire CreateFuture consultancy Apple posts ‘best March quarter’ with iPhone sales up 21.6pc Cork HQ for new onshore renewables company Perigus Energy What EU Inc really means for Europe’s start-ups – a legal view Meta, Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet post positive quarterlies Oracle reportedly cutting up to 150 Irish jobs The Leaders’ Room: Boston Scientific’s Sean Gayer on a meaningful mission Report: Medical device cyberattacks on the rise EU finds Meta not doing enough to keep underage users at bay TSMC $231m share sale marks full exit from UK chip designer Arm Datavant opens new global R&D centre in Galway’s Bonham Quay Revolut plans a physical store in Barcelona UK's IoT Tribe launches Dublin base with two new hires Report: Meta to undo Manus acquisition after Chinese block David Silver's Ineffable Intelligence raises $1.1bn Vinted hits €8bn valuation in oversubscribed €880m share sale China blocks Meta’s $2bn Manus acquisition After Amazon, Google commits up to $40bn in Anthropic Cohere buys Aleph Alpha to forge sovereign AI alternative to US Big Tech Bloomberg: Bezos’ Project Prometheus bags $10bn at $38bn value Meta to lay off 10pc of its workforce amid an AI push Intel’s shares soar as Q1 results signal brighter future Swedish legal-tech Legora buys AI legal research start-up Qura Belfast’s Cloudsmith eyes ‘massive growth’ with $72m raise France's Univity raises €27m to allow European telecoms to compete with Starlink AI race intensifies with Google's new agent management platform OpenAI taps Airbnb exec as first EMEA managing director EAM platform Blue Mountain acquires Cork’s CompuCal Calibration Solutions SpaceX agrees right to buy AI coding darling Cursor for $60bn Anthropic probing reported Mythos leak on Discord Amazon investing up to $25bn in Anthropic AI infrastructure deal Vodafone Ireland to invest €360m over the next four years Tim Cook passes Apple leadership to hardware head John Ternus Stripe alum's Seapoint raises €7.5m as ‘financial home’ to start-ups Amazon gets go-ahead for subsea cable landing station in Cork Irish co-founded AI start-up Lua raises $5.8m AIM Centre strengthening medtech and life sciences link with new Galway base Kerry Group expands Cork facility as lactose-free demand grows Nearly 75pc of AI’s economic value captured by just 20pc of companies Dublin tech company Vox Talk raises €1.35m in pre-seed round Netflix shares fall on Q2 forecast as co-founder Hastings steps aside Irish-founded Ulysses raises $46m in rounds featuring A16Z Anthropic’s Mythos to bolster cybersecurity at UK banks Solidroad raises $25m as demand for QA product sparks fresh hiring Danish finance AI start-up Spektr raises $20m Dublin's Audrey AI closes $1.8m pre-seed funding round The Leaders' Room: Equinix's Peter Lantry on powering Ireland sustainably ‘No more excuses’ as EU launches free age verification app The death of ETL: Is zero-copy a ‘liberation’ for data teams? Snap cuts 16pc workforce to prioritise AI and savings Amazon buys Globalstar to bolster Leo's satellite capabilities Dublin start-up Otel AI raises €2m to expand hotel AI platform After Anthropic, OpenAI launches cyber-specific AI model ASML forecasts €36bn in 2026 net sales amid AI race chip demand The Interview: Dentons' Carlo Salizzo on three forces defining digital law Bull and Equal1 to advance next gen of hybrid quantum tech in Europe Anthropic's Mythos a game-changer, NCSC chief tells Oireachtas Klaviyo building out its engineering team at Dublin facility Mythos just first of power models to come: Anthropic co-founder UK neobank Monzo makes Irish launch after US market exit New XP95 hacker group targets Dublin recruitment platform Healthdaq OpenAI apps for MacOS exposed by threat Mythos testing begins as governments raise cyber concerns Meta to pay CoreWeave $21bn for additional cloud capacity Digital rights group EFF leaves X Alibaba leads $293m round in Chinese AI start-up after HappyHorse reveal OpenAI pauses Stargate UK over energy costs Dublin AI SaaS provider Apex B2B launches with €1.5m backing US court won't pause Anthropic ban, but wants case expedited Anthropic's Glasswing project employs Mythos to prevent AI cyberattacks Medtech start-up Vertigenius raises €2.55m for US expansion Meath ITAD provider ICT acquired by US recycling firm Paladin Is your data integrity framework just a fancy spreadsheet? Dublin start-up Zellor bags €850k for AI shopping assistant Irish co-founded Prism Layer out from stealth with $1m raise Galway-based AI start-up Octostar raises €6.1m FT: Bezos's Project Prometheus taps xAI co-founder Kyle Kosic Irish Government approves ‘next-generation sites’ for industry Ireland begins digital wallet testing and consultation OpenAI purchases online tech talk show TBPN Capacity and speed: Why TikTok shelved its second Irish data centre SpaceX confidentially files for US IPO – reports Intel repurchasing 49pc stake in Leixlip chip factory for $14.2bn
700 fear job cuts at Meta contractor Covalen
Suhasini Sri · 2026-04-28 · via Technology – Silicon Republic

Around 400 jobs were at risk at Covalen in November. It is understood that roughly 200 have left the company.

A Dublin-based outsourcing company that works on Meta projects is laying off 700 workers, just days after the tech giant announced plans to cut 8,000 jobs.

The contractor, Covalen, has confirmed that it has commenced consultation in relation to “potential redundancies within its Dublin operations”. It said that it is “engaging directly and proactively” to support the affected teams.

Operated by parent company CPL, Covalen offers content moderation, AI training and back office admin services for a variety of industries, including finance, utilities and tech.

Alongside its Dublin headquarters, Covalen also operates in Limerick. According to its website, it employs more than 2,500 – up from the roughly 2,000 that SiliconRepublic.com had previously reported.

The latest layoffs come just months after 400 Covalen jobs were at risk of being cut in November. It is understood that around 200 workers have left the company as a result of these redundancies.

Workers carried out industrial action outside the company’s premises in Sandyford Business Park in January over what they described as a “lack of meaningful engagement by Covalen management” regarding, among other things, improved redundancy packages.

In a statement yesterday (27 April), the Communications Workers’ Union (CWU) said that Covalen workers would not “pay the price for Meta’s AI ambitions”.

The Union has asked Covalen for direct negotiations, fair redundancy packages, and an audience with Taoiseach Micheál Martin, TD, and the Minister for Enterprise, Tourism and Employment Peter Burke, TD. The group also wants Meta to drop its six-month “cooling-off” period for other Meta vendors.

“We know the real reason behind these cuts. Meta is shedding thousands of jobs worldwide, cutting staff and tearing up vendor contracts simply to pay for its massive new Artificial Intelligence bills,” said Ian McArdle, CWU’s Deputy General Secretary.

Last week, Meta said that it is cutting 10pc of its global workforce. In a memo, the company’s chief people officer said that the cuts would help “run the company more efficiently” and allow it to “offset the other investments” it’s making.

Affected employees are set to hear from the Facebook-parent on 20 May. It is unclear how many of Meta’s 1,800 direct employees in Ireland would be laid off.

Meta isn’t alone in its decision to cut its workforce in response to AI. In recent months Block has cut 4,000 jobs; Oracle, about 10,000; Amazon has cut 30,000; Atlassian, 10pc of its workforce; and Snap, about 16pc.

According to the tracking site Layoffs.fyi, more than 90,000 tech employees have been laid off in 2026 so far.

A joint report published by the Economic and Social Research Institute and the Department of Finance this month has found that AI adoption in Ireland is likely to lead to job losses, especially concentrated among highly educated workers.

This, it said, is expected to lead to increases in income inequality in the “short to medium term”, driven by job displacement among those who’ve lost their jobs, potential wage increases for those who become more productive using AI, and increased returns to capital investment.

Meanwhile, last week, the Taoiseach said that there could be a “significant upheaval in the jobs market over the next decade”. Officials have been asked to “identify the implications and impact of AI on the world of work”, he added.

“We urgently need real government intervention around AI-related job losses, not just ‘proposals’ and assessments. Tech companies cannot be allowed to discard hundreds of workers overnight to fund AI without strict government oversight,” McArdle commented.

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