britain
16 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
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Inside Diskeeper 2011 with IntelliWrite
When data fragmentation starts to affect your data storage, it can be hard for computers to figure out what's going on. Read this white paper to learn how you can improve system efficiency and...
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London's thriving cloud start-up scene
There's a sudden flourishing of cloud start-up talent in the UK. What's brought it about?
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Orange, T-Mobile merger trials 4G network in rural Britain
Parts of Britain could soon benefit from 4G technology, under a new trial to combat the poor coverage in the rural countryside.
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British spy agency losing graduate 'whizzes' to Microsoft, Google
Britain's high-tech intelligence agency is losing "internet whizzes" to Microsoft, Google and Amazon, a report by Parliament warns.
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Google WiFi snooping: Company cleared by UK watchdog
Google may be OK on StreetView WiFi snooping as far as Britain's ICO is concerned, but what about everywhere else?
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McKinnon loses more appeals on U.S. extradition
Gary McKinnon, the Briton who allegedly hacked into 97 NASA and Defense Department computers, has lost even more pleas to avoid extradition to the U.S., Wired reports. Despite McKinnon's...
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Britain hires hackers for intel squad
The hackers are coming, the hackers are coming. Britain is hiring ex-hackers as a security cadre to protect the country's computer systems from cyber attacks, AP reports. [Anti-terrorism...
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EU slams Britain over Phorm
In surveillance-happy Britain (scroll down), letting Internet providers install Phorm's tracking tools without customers' consent is just peachy. Not so for the E.U., as the Times reports. The...
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British police can now hack citizens' PCs
Seems like Britain's Home Office is channeling Dick Cheney. Last week I wrote that the U.K. is going forward with a plan to build a massive database of every phone call, email and chat...
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Britain may outsource huge surveillance database
Britain is moving forward with plans for a huge database tracking phone calls and emails and may even outsource it to private companies.
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Britain releases its X-Files
The truth may be out there, but so far it's not in the government files. The British government posted the first batch of its X-Files to a website today in a project that will eventually see the...
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Surveillance society needs privacy safeguards
Writing in the Washington Post, Frank Baitman, of the British-based Petards Group, which develops advanced surveillance systems, says that the time has come for some federal legislation on how...
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A round the pole tour: Canada, Alaska, Britain & your kitchen
In Canada, the Green Party accuses the country's Prime Minister of backing a bogus plan that only pretends to follow the Kyoto protocol. And Greenpeace in Australia is accusing their government...
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Photos: Speed cameras vex U.K. drivers
Cameras mounted alongside roads in Britain catch speeders in action--and take their share of abuse.
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Photos: Britain's refinery inferno
Satellite photos and images shot on the ground show the fire and smoke generated by Sunday's refinery explosion near London.
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Photos: Britain's refinery inferno
Satellite photos and images shot on the ground show the fire and smoke generated by Sunday's refinery explosion near London.
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Satellite tracking, electronic taps create Orwellian possibilities
Cyprus Semi CEO TJ Rodgers: I'd rather live under threat of terror attack than certainty of Patriot Act.
Additional Results
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London's thriving cloud start-up scene
There's a sudden flourishing of cloud start-up talent in the UK. What's brought it about?
-
Orange, T-Mobile merger trials 4G network in rural Britain
Parts of Britain could soon benefit from 4G technology, under a new trial to combat the poor coverage in the rural countryside.
-
British spy agency losing graduate 'whizzes' to Microsoft, Google
Britain's high-tech intelligence agency is losing "internet whizzes" to Microsoft, Google and Amazon, a report by Parliament warns.
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'Tech-injunction' gags Twitter, Facebook users: Why super-injunctions only apply to Britain
An injunction has directly prevented the spread of disclosure to Facebook and Twitter. Why is the US unphased by 'super-injunction society', and how to citizen journalists fit in?
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