News podcast: Network World 360 The federal government missed its first deadline for rolling out DNS security mechanisms on its .gov domain. Also, Google announced it was adding support for Microsoft's ActiveSync, giving iPhone and Windows Mobile users access to Google calendars and contacts. (5:27) Largest coordinated ATM rip-off ever nets $9+ million in 30 minutes And Cisco Subnet blogger Jamey Heary explains how they did it. FAA network hacked The Federal Aviation Administration has joined the growing list of government agencies that have had their supposedly safe systems hacked. The agency this week notified about 45,000 employees that one of its servers was hacked into and employee personal identity information was stolen. Qwest income down nearly 50% in Q4 2008 Qwest's income took a significant dip in the fourth quarter of 2008, as its $185 million in earnings represented a 49% drop off from its 2007 fourth-quarter earnings of $366 million. McAfee touts integrated compliance suite McAfee has taken steps to integrate its vulnerability assessment and policy management products in a single suite to make it easier for enterprises to stay on top of compliance initiatives. VoIP goes corporate - and saves users plenty With clients already skittish over the downturn in the financial markets, Benefit Consultants Group wanted to make sure its agents and brokers could be reached anytime without long waits. That included during a recent ... Verizon extends DoS detection service to 23 countries Verizon Business is extending the reach of its Denial of Service Detection service to 23 new countries, including Canada, the United Kingdom and Japan. Google adds ActiveSync to accommodate iPhone, Win Mobile Google Monday announced that it is adding support for Microsoft's ActiveSync to Google Sync, which will give iPhone and Windows Mobile offline access to their Google calendars and Gmail contacts from their mobile ... How to avoid 5 common storage mishaps Think you can guess the No. 1 threat to the security of your stored data? If you said hackers, or even trouble-making insiders, you'd be wrong. While malicious threats are an ongoing concern, it's your well-meaning ... Today on Google Subnet Google caves to Apple on multitouch;Google PowerMeter smartens up the electrical grid; Google gets that sync'ing feeling; Google Japan paid bloggers to review its new widget, says Google Blogoscoped; and Mark Murphy advises Android developers to be wary of permissions overload. |
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