david gewirtz
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Live Webcast: 3 Simple Steps to Better Patch Security
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About David Gewirtz
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In addition to hosting the ZDNet Government and ZDNet DIY-IT blogs, CBS Interactive's Distinguished Lecturer David Gewirtz is an author, U.S. policy advisor, and computer scientist. He is featured in The History Channel special The President's Book of Secrets, is one of America's foremost cyber-security experts, and is a top expert on saving and creating jobs. He is also director of the U.S. Strategic Perspective Institute as well as the founder of ZATZ Publishing.
David is a member of FBI InfraGard, the Cyberwarfare Advisor for the International Association for Counterterrorism & Security Professionals, a columnist for The Journal of Counterterrorism and Homeland Security, and has been a regular CNN contributor, and a guest commentator for the Nieman Watchdog of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University. He is the author of Where Have All the Emails Gone?, the definitive study of email in the White House, as well as How To Save Jobs and The Flexible Enterprise, the classic book that served as a foundation for today's agile business movement.
Disclosure
David Gewirtz
At various times during his adult life, David has voted for both Democrats and Republicans, and has been disappointed by both. He is deeply disturbed by how partisanship has come before patriotism in America, which gives him the freedom to pick on both sides.
David is a frequent guest on TV and radio stations across America and can usually be heard or seen on-the-air at least once a week. He writes weekly commentary and analysis for CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360 and has been interviewed by Fox News, CNN, various ABC and NBC affiliates, and Canada’s Global TV. He has been a featured guest on National Public Radio and has also been featured on Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, and Radio Liberty where his commentaries on technology, industry, and emerging nations have been broadcast into 46 countries (all in their own unique translations).
David is the executive director of U.S. Strategic Perspective Institute, a nonprofit research and policy organization. He is the Cyberterrorism Advisor for the International Association for Counterterrorism & Security Professionals, a columnist for The Journal of Counterterrorism and Homeland Security and a special contributor to Frontline Security Magazine. He is a member of the FBI’s InfraGard program, the security partnership between the FBI and industry. David is also a member of the U.S. Naval Institute and the National Defense Industrial Association, the leading defense industry association promoting national security.
David is an advisory board member for the Technical Communications and Management Certificate program at the University of California, Berkeley extension. He is also a member of the instructional faculty at the University of California, Berkeley extension.
David’s “day job” is as publisher and editor-in-chief of ZATZ publishing, an online publisher of technical magazines. Other than than his ownership stake in Component Enterprises, Inc. (the parent company of ZATZ), David has no additional industry investments.
ZATZ has many advertisers who do, in part, provide for David’s lush income and extravagant lifestyle. Most of them are IBM and Lotus aftermarket suppliers, some of them make goodies for Microsoft Outlook, and a few make all sorts of strange mobile devices and add-on products. David has been a regular judge of the IBM Awards, but has no formal financial interest in or with IBM.
Because the ZATZ online magazines often review products, David and ZATZ are sent an overwhelming stream of unsolicited, silly, and often useless products to review. Because they’re such a pain to track and ship back, these products often wind up in a dumpster or fill up the corner of a large closet. Although David has no plans to review products in connection to his ZDNet blog, if he does do a product review, he will disclose any relationship completely in that posting.
Both through ZATZ and independently, David derives a small income through various advertising and sales relationships with Amazon.com and Google. These are minor relationships and they will not impede his willingness or ability to chastise either company should they deserve it.
David has many other business relationships, but none of them relate to anything he covers in his ZDNet blog. David does have a bit of the sales-guy bug and if he’s not doing a sales deal with someone at least once a month, he goes through withdrawal. He has a number of consulting clients, but none of them relate to anything he covers for ZDNet (and if they ever do, he will either disclose that fact, or decline to write about them).
Back in the 1980s, David held the unusual title of “Godfather” at Apple. He has written and published 40 incredibly simplistic applications for Apple’s iPhone.
Although David is forbidden to disclose the terms of his iPhone developer agreement, he isn’t drinking the Apple Kool Aid, will never be confused with a metrosexual, and feels free to mock Apple, and Apple users, any time the occasion permits, on alternate Tuesdays, or if he’s bored.
Biography
David Gewirtz
David is a member of FBI InfraGard, the Cyberwarfare Advisor for the International Association for Counterterrorism & Security Professionals, a columnist for The Journal of Counterterrorism and Homeland Security, and has been a regular CNN contributor, and a guest commentator for the Nieman Watchdog of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University. He is the author of Where Have All the Emails Gone?, the definitive study of email in the White House, as well as How To Save Jobs and The Flexible Enterprise, the classic book that served as a foundation for today's agile business movement.
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9 things you don't know about the iPad 3
In the spirit of guessing about products we have no real information about, here are 9 things you don't know about the iPad 3.
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Free speech: Why I'm lucky to live in America, not Iran
The big reason we're better: they don't execute you for blogging in America. Sometimes your page rank goes down, but it's not quite the same thing.
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Android security deep dive (video)
If you've ever wanted to know about Android security, here's your opportunity.
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Are Americans too dumb for real news?
If we can't count on Time to tell us what we need to be paying attention to, then who can we count on?
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Three ugly, middle-aged men argue about Windows 8
You will have the unparalleled and unprecedented opportunity to watch us pontificate on the future of Windows 8. Bring popcorn. There will be fireworks.
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Ode to manual typewriters
Manual typewriters are back, and they're all the retro rage. This article contains stories from leading technology journalists about their relationship with manual typewriters.
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Why Windows 8 matters for real work, and so will Windows 9
The bottom line is this: to do real work with real computers you need a real operating system. You need Windows. Nothing else, really, will do.
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Amazon reduces S3 prices, because $0.11 is too much to charge
If you're using a ton of S3 space, your bill's going down next month. Even if you're not using a ton of space, your bill is probably going down. Can't beat that with a stick.
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Green screen lighting in the Skype Studio
There are a number of challenges when setting up lighting for green screen in a small studio space. Here's how DIY-IT's David Gewirtz solved them for his Skype Studio project.
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Chris Dodd and the MPAA: bribery or politics as usual?
So it looks like former Senator and current anti-freedom monger Chris Dodd, and his band of merry MPAAers, are once again showing their completely crass nature. Annoyed by the temporary defeat of...
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DIY-IT Project Guide
This is the comprehensive guide to the DIY-IT projects. If you're working on a DIY project of your own, this is a good place to start.
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Dear Google: our privacy is not the usual yada, yada
Our privacy is not, nor has it ever been, yada yada. Our privacy is not something you dismiss with a wave of your hand, a weak smile, and a shrug, as if we're petulant children.
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Apple: made in China, untaxed profits kept offshore
About two-thirds of Apple's $97.6 billion cash pile is offshore. That’s a lot of money for an American company to keep outside of America.
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Join me tomorrow online in ZDNet's 2012 Guide To Small Business Technology Trends webcast
ZDNet is proud to present the 2012 Guide to Small Business Technology Trends, a live and interactive webcast about the most promising solutions for the most pressing challenges.
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Live-tweeting a political event: what worked, and what didn't
David Gewirtz shares some of the lessons he's learned about doing a live-tweet event, and some tips you might want to keep in mind if you do one yourself.
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Tweet of the Union (live-tweeting the State of the Union)
Join ZDNet Government's David Gewirtz at 9pm ET tonight at @DavidGewirtz for an interactive live-tweet discussion of the President's State of the Union address.
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Would you like to read the 156 reviews Newt Gingrich wrote on Amazon.com?
Among other things, Mr. Gingrich talks about why the Presidential campaign of Mitt Romney's father, George Romney, failed back in the 1960s.
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Dear Congress, guess what? We already have copyright laws.
What you need to do, my dear politician friends, is to stop listening to the lobbyists and start listening to the innovators.
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So, seriously, do the Dems want to lose the election?
I've always been amazed at the Democratic party's ability, when life gives them lemonade, to somehow turn it back into lemons.
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5 reasons why SOPA, PROTECT-IP and other legislative idiocy will never die
No matter how many times we push back on legislative heinousness, it will come back and it will keep coming back. Here's why.
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