& crime
22 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
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Running Diskeeper and V-locity on SAN connected systems
Take a look at this white paper to learn more about how you can safely defrag your SAN connected systems with the help of Diskeeper and V-Locity.
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Bletchley Park restoration short on funds
Mansion and three huts used by World War II code breakers such as Alan Turing need millions of dollars of repair, director says.
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Police Blotter: Murderer nabbed via tracking, Web search
Husband's death is discovered through a vehicle-tracking device and a search for "decomposition of a body in water."
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Fraud abroad remains 'uphill battle' for eBay
Phishers in Romania, Russia, and China have "no fear of real punishment," eBay manager says at e-crime conference.
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EC plans biometric border checks
European Commission proposed biometric checks include face screening and automated security checks.
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FBI takes biometrics database proposal to U.K.
The agency's proposed "server in the sky" database would share biometric data on the world's most-wanted criminals.
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Police Blotter: Can Circuit City techs legally peruse files?
After retailer allegedly discovers contraband on man's PC, he asks judges to say results of search can't be used as evidence.
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Police swoop in on New Zealand botmaster
The suspect, seized as part of the FBI's Operation Bot Roast, is alleged to have had illegal control over 1 million computers.
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NSA cooperation: OK for e-mail, IM companies?
White House wanted immunity for phone companies over possible cooperation with NSA, but new bill also would shield e-mail, IM providers.
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Police Blotter: Is it legal to use an alias anymore?
Arizona senior citizen sentenced to 10 years for inventing the name "Peter Reynolds" and using it to open bank accounts, pay his monthly bills.
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China leads Asia in malicious online activity
Report finds that China topped the region in the first half of 2007, producing the most malicious code, spam zombies, bots and attacks.
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China accused of cyberattacks on New Zealand
New Zealand secret service hints that Chinese government is responsible for recent attacks on the country's networks.
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EC funds counterterrorism tech research
Forty-four research projects are to be funded, including a technique for video detection of abnormal behavior in crowds.
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London revealed as hot spot for online credit card fraud
Fraud information group Early Warning creates a map of the United Kingdom, showing the worst-offending regions.
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Police Blotter: MySpace profile becomes part of rape conviction
Man charged with statutory rape wants to use as evidence victim's MySpace.com page that falsely claimed she was 18 years old.
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Australia's porn-blocking plan unveiled
Program includes filtering software for home PCs, as well as an ISP-level plan being tested in Tasmania.
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Thieves in U.K. steal police data server
Server was used to help track movements of terrorism suspects, although data on device is of relatively little value, police say.
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Doubts arise over fate of breathalyzer source code
Attorney for a man accused of drunk driving predicts device maker won't turn over code, which could lead to charges being dropped.
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Police Blotter: Defendant wins breathalyzer source code
Man charged with drunk driving says his attorney needs access to the source code to fight the charges; state supreme court agrees.
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U.K. earmarks funds for antiterrorist system
E-Borders passenger-screening system will be fully implemented over the next decade at a cost of about $2.4 billion.
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National ID card a disaster in the making
Security experts Richard Forno and Bruce Schneier say Homeland Security is committing a blunder of historic proportion.
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