addresses
2 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
-
Healthcare Disaster Recovery Whitepaper
Download this white paper to learn how backup and recovery are an essential part of this platform and discover how you too can prepare yourself for an emergency.
-
IPv4 address shortage reaching critical stage
The shortage of IPv4 addresses has reached a critical stage - less than 10 percent are still available - according to the registries that allocate internet numbers around the world.
-
IPv6 isn’t just about more addresses
Spreadsheet co-inventor and networking guru Bob Frankston says we've patched, propped up, and wringed all we can out of IPv4--the version of the Internet Protocol that most computers currently...
Additional Results
-
Nimble addresses the social media-to-CRM disconnect
Nimble integrates social network interactions and leads from digital marketing campaigns into its CRM platform.
-
Apple doesn't enforce its own Address Book policy
Developers get free access to your iOS address book because Apple turns a blind eye to it and doesn't enforce its own TOS.
-
User meta data wars going way too far, Google
I kind of feel like my pocket has been picked of the little black book I keep there for my contacts. My contacts.
-
Path discovered phoning home with your address book
Upstart social network Path was discovered uploading users' complete address book to its servers. Completely inexcusable in today's privacy-sensitive society.
-
BrowserID takes evolutionary step; ventures into wild
The Mozilla Foundation is inviting all email providers to adopt its BrowserID technology and begin validating their users' log-ins to Web sites that support the protocol.
-
BrowserID testing waters, but missing pieces weaken story
The Mozilla Foundation is finally testing its BrowserID authentication system, but a missing part of the architecture used to validate a user's credentials is a big gap the Foundation must address.
-
Mozilla 'crowdsourcing' State of the Union address
Mozilla will use captions and subtitles provided by people worldwide, translating the speech into dozens of languages within hours.
-
Israeli hacker posts '100,000' more stolen Facebook logins
Israeli hacker Hannibal claims to have stolen another 100,000 Facebook logins from Arab users of the social network. A quick analysis shows that the number is actually closer to 20,000 accounts.
-
McAfee software allows spam for hijacked PCs
McAfee is looking into a problem with a service in its SaaS Endpoint Protection software that appears to be allowing computers to serve as open proxies for sending spam.
-
GM moves to address electric vehicle battery safety concerns
Automaker will make modifications to protect the Volt's battery housing. It hasn't announced an outright recall but Volt owners will have the opportunity to enhance their cars, if desired.
-
Anonymous comments on Lumia 800 'review' traced back to Nokia and Microsoft IP addresses
Comments on negative Nokia Lumia 800 review traced back to Nokia and Microsoft IP addresses.
-
iOS 5.1 beta 2 still doesn't address iPhone 4S/4 battery issue
However, bear in mind that this is a beta.
-
CIOs must address Euro crisis now to protect enterprises: Gartner
The current financial crisis in the Eurozone has the potential to inflict damages worldwide, and CIOs should be proactive about the situation, according to Gartner.
-
Six Android issues that Google doesn't want to address
Size (of the market share) isn't everything
-
To address brain drain, Yahoo needs to get back to basics
Yahoo is preparing for a wave of employees to jump ship to other startups in Silicon Valley. Only this time, the wound is self-inflicted.
-
7 questions that Carrier IQ needs to address immediately
According to Carrier IQ's website, the rootkit is deployed on over 140 million handsets.
-
40,000+ email addresses and passwords discovered on phishing site
Over 40,000 Hotmail and MSN email addresses, along with passwords, have been discovered on a phishing Web site. Read about the incident here.
-
U.S. judge upholds Twitter subpoena of Wikileaks' followers
A U.S. federal district judge has upheld previous rulings, allowing the government to access Twitter accounts of Wikileaks' supporters.
The best of ZDNet, delivered
ZDNet Newsletters
Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox




