government agency
5 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
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Stop Losing Performance to File Fragmentation
The best defragmenter only goes to work after system resources have been used to fragment files. You can never recoup that wasted performance. Try Diskeeper 2010 Pro edition free for 30 days and...
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Stop driving IT with your 'rear-view mirror'
Companies and government agencies previously used data to understand what has happened in the past. Now they want to learn what is happening now.
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Australian gvts crippled with purchases of cheap infected hardware
Australian advisors reported that government agencies have bought cheap foreign IT hardware loaded with malware.
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Consultant: SOA not good enough yet for government work
Security considerations, immaturity, may hamstring government SOA efforts
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Government employee blogs
When is the public's right to know more important than a government agency's right to privacy? Bob Artner looks at the legal issues involved in government employee blogs and suggests evaluating...
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Study: Government outsourcing needs oversight
Government offices are outsourcing desktop IT services, but need to keep better track of where they're spending money and what benefits they receive, according to a watchdog agency.
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Additional Results
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Microsoft rolls out Office 365 for Government
Microsoft has added a multi-tenant version of Office 365 for government users to its hosted app line-up.
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Top 374 keywords the U.S. government monitors
Three months on, the media mill continues to grind after EPIC releases a four-page list of words the U.S. government monitors social media for.
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Open source and the National Security Agency, together again
Open-source software and the National Security Agency go together like peanut-butter and jelly. No, they really do!
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New York's anonymity ban: Why should the Web be any different?
New York wants to outlaw anonymous comments to prevent cyberbullying and other online abuse. This criminologist examines why this plan, despite its controversy, may not be such a bad thing.
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Government caught exaggerating IT reform progress
Be it a matter of perspective or different terminology, the Federal Government's IT reform plan is not meeting its expectations.
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SAP gets huge cloud and extended business process boost with Ariba acquisition
SAP is focused on global cloud growth opportunities, but is wisely defining cloud as a place to do business and extend socially amplified discovery and collaboration efficiencies.
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Anonymous hacks Bureau of Justice, leaks 1.7GB of data
Anonymous has apparently hacked the United States Bureau of Justice Statistics and posted 1.7GB of data belonging to the agency on The Pirate Bay. This is a Monday Mail Mayhem release.
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Europe offers Google settlement option in antitrust case
After months of dilly-dallying and thumb-twiddling, European competition regulators said Google can remedy its actions and settle to prevent a fully-fledged antitrust investigation.
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Pakistan censors Twitter: all may not be what it seems
Was the Pakistani Twitter shutdown just about squelching free speech over an art contest, or was there potentially something more?
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Sex Tech: IsAnyoneUp, UK ISP filter conspiracy theories, no porn for Coke
Hunter Moore investigated by FBI, UK porn filter conspiracy theories, Coca Cola vs. porn cybersquatters and Big Porn is sued for patent infringement.
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Zuckerberg won't share - IPO will maintain his total control
It's ironic that Facebook encourages so much sharing by so many yet Mr Zuckerberg refuses to share where it matters -- control of the company.
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UK government staff caught snooping on citizen data
What a surprise: the U.K. government was forced to reveal under Freedom of Information laws more than 1,000 civil servants have 'snooped' on British citizens' private data.
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Cyber security: U.S. mulls blocking China Mobile license
Concerned about cyber security and possible spying, U.S. officials are considering denying China Mobile's license for providing international information service in the United States. Officials...
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21-year-old gets 12 months for hacking Facebook account
After pleading guilty to breaching the the UK's Computer Misuse Act 1990 on two counts, a UK man has been sentenced to a year in prison for hacking into an American's Facebook account last year.
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UK government keeps RIM in play with BlackBerry 7 security rating
RIM is holding on to the niche government market by certifying BlackBerry 7 as fit for government use, while Apple and Google have yet to step up to the mark.
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