Selasa, 21 Februari 2012

The senseless battle over easy, secure data access

One simple step to better network security | Symantec: Stripping online certificate revocation checks from Chrome is misguided

InfoWorld's Security Central

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The senseless battle over easy, secure data access
IT is charged with -- and held responsible for -- protecting the organization's data against loss or exposure. But their methods often fail to take into account the legitimate business needs of the employees. Read More


WHITE PAPER: NetIQ

Authentication and Authorization
Read this Deep Dive and learn the right way to apply authentication, authorization, and accounting to your business computing infrastructure. Learn More!

RESOURCE COMPLIMENTS OF: Amazon Web Services

Why Run Windows Server Apps on AWS?
Top 5 Reasons: 1. No New Hardware, 2. Get Started in Minutes, 3. Use Your .NET Skills in the AWS Cloud, 4. On-Demand Test Environments, and 5. Use your Existing Microsoft Licenses. Learn more with on-demand webinar. Watch now!

One simple step to better network security
Focus on finding the biggest security problems and resolve to repair one of them before even thinking about the second. You can't effectively juggle multiple priorities, no matter how much management wants you to. Read More

Symantec: Stripping online certificate revocation checks from Chrome is misguided
Stripping Online Certificate Status Protocol and certificate revocation list checks from Google Chrome could turn Google into a single point of failure. Symantec says that Google and other browser vendors should help fix OCSP instead of giving up on it. Read More

Google's tracking of Safari users could lead to FTC investigation
Google's alleged circumvention of do-not-track controls on Apple's Safari browser could lead to big fines from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission if the agency determines Google has violated a privacy settlement the company agreed to in March. Read More

Apple's new OS X tightens screws on some malware
Mac OS X 'Mountain Lion' will let users install only programs downloaded from the Mac App Store or those digitally signed by a registered developer. Read More



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