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Complementary Subscription of McAfee Total Protection Service Offered by HP
SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- McAfee, Inc. (NYSE:MFE) today announced a worldwi...
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...-aided design, medical imaging, and security. Holography permits the recording and reproducing ... approximately three terabytes of digital data for nearly two weeks to create the final image. Ze...Security Devices. The production of holograms requires expensive, s...
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Imation to offer new line of highly secure data storage products for government and commercial applications
LAS VEGAS -- Imation Corp. (NYSE: IMN), ...
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In the past few years, new applications, resources and enhancements have dramatically improved insurance agents' ability to work more efficiently and improve their competitive edge. This article looks at some new and maybe unexpected ways technology can benefit your agency. Here are some of the specific technologies that could help agents improve their business: 1. noise-reduction system, 2. desktop scanning, 3. dual monitors, 4. Webinars, 5. data-security devices, and 6. online accounting services. Combining a little creativity with cutting-edge technology, an agency can produce profitable results. Technology is not just software, servers, PCs and printers. It is also application. Making the most of technology can help any agency increase productivity and profitability while reducing e...
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--PIN Entry Device Security Requirements to Include Unattended Payment Terminals and Host Security Modules--
WAKEFIELD, Mass. -- The PCI Security St...
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In today's world of computer systems and programs of infinite complexity, almost anything can happen and the results can be dramatic. One of the most infamous incidents of computer breach was first revealed in January 2007 when TJX Cos announced that it was the victim of an unauthorized computer systems intrusion. It had discovered in mid-December of the previous year that its computer systems were compromised and that customer data was stolen. According to a new study by Ponemon Institute, employees routinely engage in activities that put sensitive data at risk: downloading data onto unsecured mobile devices (61%), sharing passwords (47%), losing data-bearing devices (43%), and turning off their mobile devices' security tools (21%). As serious as this risky behavior is in the retail an...
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Business Editors
STERLING, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 17, 2001
Kasten Chase (TSE:KCA), a leading provider of high-assurance data security systems, ...
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June may turn out to have been a good month to find a job after all. A private report said businesses hired twice as many workers as economists had expected. Applications for unemployment benefits have reached a seven-week low. And more small businesses said they plan to increase hiring in the next three months, a trade association said. The brighter outlook for jobs emerged one day before the government will issue the June employment report, regarded as the most reliable gauge of job creation. The three reports suggested that the overall economy may also be starting to strengthen now that gas prices have begun to decline and supply disruptions stemming from Japan's crises have started to ease.
A new security hole has opened up in Apple Inc.'s iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch devices, raisin...
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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- The United Arab Emirates outlined plans yesterday to block BlackBerry e-mail, messaging and Web browsing services in a crackdown that could jeopardize efforts to establish the country as an international business hub.
The government cited a potential security threat because encrypted data sent on the devices is moved abroad, where it cannot be monitored for illegal activity. But the decision -- quickly followed by a similar move in Saudi Arabia -- raises questions about whether the conservative Gulf nations are trying to further control content they deem politically or morally objectionable.
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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates - The United Arab Emirates outlined plans Sunday to block BlackBerry e-mail, messaging and Web browsing services in a crackdown that could jeopardize efforts to establish the country as an international business hub.
The government cited a potential security threat because encrypted data sent on the devices is moved abroad, where it cannot be monitored for illegal activity. But the decision - quickly followed by a similar move in Saudi Arabia - raises questions about whether the conservative Gulf nations are trying to further control content they deem politically or morally objectionable.