July 30, 2008 / David Meyer
Nortel is to be the official network infrastructure supplier to the 2012 London Olympic and Paralympic Games.
July 30, 2008 / Michael Horowitz
Not only is there is a flaw in the Domain Name System, there is also a flaw in the suggested ways to test whether your computer is vulnerable.
July 30, 2008 / Caroline McCarthy
MySpace, the social network owned by News Corp.'s Fox Interactive Media, announced Wednesday that it has hired five new members for its executive team--three senior vice presidents and two vice president--in fields ranging from engineering to customer service. They're coming from a mixed background of media and tech.
July 29, 2008 / Caroline McCarthy
There's going to be an Elvis karaoke contest on MySpace. That is not a joke. I can't seem to figure out whether it's trying to market Elvis to a younger generation or MySpace to an older one--or if it's just for kicks.
July 29, 2008 / David Meyer
BT has bought internet-telephony company Ribbit, in a move that will bring the communications giant up against competitors ranging from Skype to Google's Android platform.
July 29, 2008 / Caroline McCarthy
Facebook users in the U.S. and Canada can no longer access Scrabulous, the faux-Scrabble game that quickly became one of the most popular applications on its developer platform.
July 29, 2008 / Tim Conneally
New search engine Cuil has opened to the public, and with it, the requisite comparisons and challenges to Google, former employer of Cuil's engineering team. But the site is experiencing much downtime in its first day.
July 28, 2008 / Tim Conneally
"Spam King" Edward Davidson, who recently disappeared from the Colorado minimum security facility where he was serving 21 months for tax evasion and e-mail fraud, was found dead yesterday from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
July 28, 2008 / Marguerite Reardon
AT&T is looking to halt the proposed merger of Sprint Nextel's nationwide WiMax assets with those of Clearwire.
July 28, 2008 / Nick Farrell
An American trillion, that is
July 28, 2008 / Jennifer Guevin
Google has ended negotiations to buy social-news site Digg.com, according to TechCrunch.
July 28, 2008 / Emil Protalinski
Microsoft blogger Mary Jo Foley has just broken the news on a deadline for the final version of Internet Explorer 8. Microsoft has remained very tight-lipped about this, but we now know there will be a new version of the world's most popular browser released this year:
July 27, 2008 / Joel Hruska
About two weeks ago, we covered the release of a DNS security fix meant to patch a vulnerability in the system that matches domain names with IP addresses. The flaw had been discovered by security researcher Dan Kaminsky some months earlier but, at the time, details on the exploit were being kept secret. That information has since leaked thanks to an accidental blog post by someone at Matasano Security. Fast forward four days, and hackers, enterprising little children that they are, have released an exploit aimed squarely at the vulnerability.
July 27, 2008 / Matthew Broersma
Security researchers have taken a page out of Google's book in reinventing the blacklist, a tool for blocking internet attacks.
July 27, 2008 / Michael Hatamoto
Even though the government places heavy restrictions on the Internet with censorship and routine crackdowns on cyber dissidents, China has finally surpassed the United States for the most online users in the world.
July 27, 2008 / Tim Conneally
One Internet spammer was sentenced this week to nearly four years in prison, while another fled a correctional facility and is currently on the run.
July 23, 2008 / Joel Hruska
ICANN has unanimously approved a request by the Public Interest Registry (which handles .org domains) to become the first generic Top Level Domain (gTLD) to switch to the DNS security protocol DNSSEC. As part of the agreement, PIR will trailblaze DNSSEC, while simultaneously developing an education and adoption plan that can later be disseminated across the Internet's infrastructure, PIR's use of DNSSEC is a significant step forward, but a mixture of contentious political and technological issues have slowed the worldwide development and deployment process.
July 23, 2008 / Steven Musil
The computer network hostage crisis in San Francisco is over, thanks to the city's mayor.
July 23, 2008 / Ed Oswald
A division of cable provider Comcast has struck deals with three other rival cable operators to help them serve online video to their customers.
July 23, 2008 / Jacqueline Emigh
The cat is out of the bag before Black Hat. That isn't a passage from a Dr. Seuss children's book, but a description of what happened on Monday when a Web site accidentally posted details about a DNS flaw uncovered by security researcher Dan Kaminsky earlier this month.
July 23, 2008 / Ed Oswald
Popular social networking site MySpace said Tuesday it will join the open source authentication platform OpenID, further bolstering the idea of a unified system to carry online identities between Web sites. But for now, MySpace's OpenID accounts cannot be used elsewhere.
July 23, 2008 / Ina Fried
With its first update to Windows Home Server, Microsoft has fixed a critical bug that threatened to undermine the product's main utility--securely and reliably backing up computer files.
July 22, 2008 / Tom Espiner
The website of the Georgian president was the subject of a distributed-denial-of-service attack over the weekend.
July 22, 2008 / Stephen Shankland
AOL announced partnerships to bolster its AOL Health site with content from Caring.com, Health.com, and HealthCare.com, the Time Warner subsidiary said Monday.
July 22, 2008 / Elinor Mills
NEW YORK--Kevin Mitnick knows that the weakest link in any security system is the person holding the information.
July 21, 2008 / Brian Heater
The country's largest wireless provider announced Friday that it will finally be making good on its promises of free nation-wide hotspots for iPhone owners, first announced back in April.
July 19, 2008 / Elinor Mills
NEW YORK--Using a laptop, cell phone headset, building access badge, credit cards, or even a passport can make you a walking target for data thieves and other criminals, a security expert warned at the Last HOPE hacker conference here late Friday.
July 18, 2008 / Emil Protalinski
BitDefender researchers are reporting that new spam messages are using fake events ostensibly involving actor Angelina Jolie and claiming the MSN Featured Offers program. Users that fall for them will be tricked into infecting their PCs with Trojan.Agent.AGGZ. The e-mail typically attempts to lure users into downloading a binary file entitled video-nude-anjelina.avi.exe. As usual, the spam message itself is written using poor grammar and uses multiple obfuscations to trick spam filters.
July 18, 2008 / Nick Heath
UK courts and police forces could save tens of millions of pounds thanks to technology to aimed at streamlining the criminal justice system.
July 17, 2008 / Greg Sandoval
Fresh from a failed attempt at online video, Amazon is giving it another go.
July 17, 2008 / Jessica Dolcourt
It's time that Opera Mobile got its due. Long overshadowed by Opera Mini--the light, server-fed browser for Java phones--Opera Mobile is a robust browser built on Web standards (and written with C and C++) that's known for delivering a full Web experience to Windows Mobile and Symbian phones.
July 16, 2008 / Nick Heath
Enough information to fill multiple CDs every second is flowing across the world on a network 1,000 times faster than home broadband.
July 16, 2008 / Stephen Shankland
Google's steadily increasing search share neared 70 percent in June in the US, according to new figures released on Tuesday by Hitwise.
July 16, 2008 / Elinor Mills
A network administrator for the city of San Francisco has been arrested on charges of taking control of the city's computer network and locking administrators out, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
July 16, 2008 / Tom Espiner
Internet service providers are to be invited to tender for a government scheme to monitor all internet communications and telecommunications.
July 16, 2008 / Robert McMillan
An employee of 1-800-Flowers.com has been fired after an e-mailed death threat was linked to her account.
July 16, 2008 / Dan Nystedt
Multimedia software maker CyberLink sees a lot of opportunities in the fast-growing netbook segment of the computer market, from online access to files stored on home PCs to multimedia software made for Linux OSs.
July 15, 2008 / David Meyer
BT is to roll out fibre connectivity to millions of UK homes, the communications and IT giant announced on Tuesday.
July 14, 2008 / Stephen Shankland
A company that measures internet service reliability has given Microsoft the top score in a test of operating system update services.
July 14, 2008 / Dennis O'Reilly
Microsoft's Internet Explorer remains the most popular browser in the world. This despite report after report calling the program less secure than Mozilla Firefox, Opera, and other free competitors.
July 13, 2008 / enigmax
Following comments which suggested that the closure of QuebecTorrent was “a major victory” for the recording industry, we have a statement from the owner of the site to balance things up. The smaller battle against this site is over, the larger one against Canadian BitTorrent sites in general appears unaffected.
July 12, 2008 / Hanna Sistek
Getting poor Skype sound and want to cut down on international call costs? Truphone's new iPhone app might be worth checking out.
July 12, 2008 / Jacqueline Emigh
The next time you lose your cell phone, you might hear it scream something like "I'm stolen!" or "I'm lost - take me home," through new location-based technology now under development by a company called Yougetitback.com.
July 12, 2008 / Stefanie Olsen
It can be hard to find a needle in YouTube's vast video haystack, despite the fact that the site is owned by search expert Google.
July 11, 2008 / Jacqui Cheng
An appeals court in Germany has ruled that the owners of a network are not responsible for the copyright infringement of their users. The decision overturns a previous judgment that held an open WiFi network owner liable for damages, even if the infringer is a stranger making use of the network. Although the latest ruling may affect others across Europe, it's not likely to carry much weight in the US.
July 11, 2008 / David Chartier
Yahoo today made good on a promise of opening up its search platform for third parties—including search startups—to build their own services and search engines. Dubbed "BOSS" for Build Your Own Search Service, Yahoo's offering is a major step for search innovation, but also a quiet statement that Yahoo isn't planning on taking the lead.
July 10, 2008 / enigmax
A German court has ruled that Internet users operating a WiFi router are not responsible if others use their equipment to infringe copyright on P2P networks. The news is likely to be seen as yet another blow for lawyers Davenport Lyons who have been insisting that German law decisions would be mirrored in the UK.
July 10, 2008 / Elinor Mills
Google on Tuesday said it is now using an email-authentication technology to keep phishers from luring Gmail users to fake eBay and PayPal web pages in order to steal usernames and passwords.
July 10, 2008 / David Meyer
The spread of WiMax networks across the UK is continuing, with two providers announcing extensions of their business-oriented networks in the past week.
July 10, 2008 / GovTech
The city government television station of Des Moines, Iowa, Channel DMTV7, is using a portable production studio to produce and air daily press conferences and updates on the flood emergency. Station personnel moved from DMTV7's production studio in city hall on June 11th after the floods hit the city. DMTV7 is currently producing from the Des Moines Central Library. The production staff has moved operations twice since then.
July 9, 2008 / Kablenet.com
The Department for Work and Pensions has been accused of failing to measure benefit fraud properly because of its tardiness in improving IT systems.
July 9, 2008 / Robert Vamosi
A security researcher has responsibly disclosed a fundamental flaw within the Domain Name System, or DNS, the addressing scheme behind the common names used on the internet.
July 8, 2008 / enigmax
Virgin Media, plagued by a recent flurry of bad publicity thanks to its policy of working with the music industry to warn file-sharers, has announced today that there is “absolutely no possibility” that it will disconnect its users from the Internet or hand over their details to the music industry.
July 8, 2008 / Vivian Yeo
Online scammers are expected to exploit the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, opening in a month's time, according to a Symantec security report.
July 8, 2008 / Ernesto
BitTorrent’s popularity is growing every day. Despite the lawsuits that some of the larger torrent sites are involved in, they continue to grow traffic wise. Let’s take a look at how Google ranks the top torrent sites.
July 8, 2008 / Scott M. Fulton, III
"This is where we think the future of the Internet is going -- you can start to see these applications breaking out of the confines of the browser space, and try to move onto the desktop," a key Mozilla engineer told BetaNews.
July 7, 2008 / Marguerite Reardon
Video may have killed the radio star, but it doesn't have to kill the Internet.
July 7, 2008 / Emil Protalinski
Yahoo Messenger for Windows Vista has been in development since even before the RTM of Vista. Soon after the operating system's release, Yahoo showed off the first application that would run only on Windows XP's successor. On December 5, 2007, Yahoo! offered the first preview for download, which sported new features such as transparent windows, tabbed chatting, the ability to transfer files of up to 2GB, and a matching Windows Sidebar gadget. The first beta was released two months ago and brought voice features, SMS, and Mail alerts to the new IM client.
July 7, 2008 / Nick Heath
London's datacentre sector has suffered a downturn, with no corporates taking up space in the capital this year.
July 6, 2008 / Nate Mook
Centercode is seeking beta testers in the New York City metropolitan area to try out a new device that serves as a portable Web browser. It works via cellular network, but comes already activated and won't require you to switch from your current phone to participate.
July 6, 2008 / Natalie Weinstein
Google apparently decided to keep it clean, in more ways than one.
July 6, 2008 / Joe Kissel
If you want to make sure you have exactly the same e-mail messages--including all your saved and sent mail-on two or more Macs, there's an easy way and a hard way to do so.
July 5, 2008 / Robert Vamosi
On Thursday, Opera released version 9.51. The new version fixes a few security vulnerabilities and resolves some stability issues. One of the fixes addresses an arbitrary code execution vulnerability that was not previously made public.
July 5, 2008 / Ernesto
Leaseweb, the former ISP of BitTorrent trackers such as Demonoid, What.cd and Waffles.fm lost the appeal against the Dutch anti-piracy outfit BREIN. The Amsterdam court concluded that Leaseweb has to permanently shut down the BitTorrent tracker everlasting.nu, and hand over the admin’s personal information.
July 5, 2008 / Nate Anderson
What do terrorists and telco execs have in common? They hate us for our freedoms, naturally. And they especially hate our freedom to roam the verdant grasslands of the Internet as freely as the majestic bison once wandered the fruited plains of the West. A group of mostly-indie rockers from the Future of Music Coalition agree, and they're releasing a benefit CD later this month to help fund the Coalition's campaign for a neutral 'Net.
July 4, 2008 / Natalie Weinstein
The German baby taken from his parents after they put him up for sale on eBay for a euro--apparently as a joke--is back home, according to the Associated Press.
July 4, 2008 / Robert Vamosi
On Wednesday, Microsoft announced new security features in the upcoming release of Internet Explorer 8 Beta 2.
July 2, 2008 / Sharon Fisher
A paper will be published later this year with far-ranging recommendations for reducing cybercrime in Europe, including a statutory scale of damages against ISPs that do not respond promptly to requests to shut out compromised machines.
July 1, 2008 / Robert Vamosi
Taking a cue from Morgan Spurlock who lived on fast food for 30 days in the Super Size Me documentary, McAfee gathered volunteers from around the world who would, for one hour a day, surf the Internet, signing up for various newsletters, filling in various forms. As they did so, the participants were asked to blog about their experiences.
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