privacy rights
1 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
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Introducing the New VMware Management Solution Portfolio
Check out this webcast to learn more about the New VMware Management Solution Portfolio.
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How the new 'Protecting Children' bill puts you at risk
A bill now makes the online activity of every American available to authorities upon request under the guise of protecting children from pornography.
Additional Results
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Do we need a smartphone bill of rights for iOS?
The EFF called Apple devices "beautiful crystal prisons" because they have a wide range of restrictions. EFF's call was to let people tinker.
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Cloud Computing: Is it right for you?
How do you know if cloud computing makes sense for your organization? And if it makes sense for your organization what sort of services should you buy into? Here are the questions to ask.
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IBM bans Siri: Privacy risk, or corporate paranoia at its best?
IBM has banned Siri over concerns Apple and its partners could actively read uploaded queries. Corporate paranoia at its finest, or is IBM right to ban the intelligent assistant?
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Choosing the right computer to power the Skype Studio
In later articles, when I tell you what obscenities I'm making this little machine do in the name of broadcasting, you'll understand why this is so very important.
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Pantech Verse gets messaging right (photos)
U.S. Cellular's Pantech Verse may strike you as a throwback model with its QWERTY keyboard and deemphasis on data.
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TeenTech Weekly: Zuckerberg's student mocking, privacy policies, free Xboxes
The weekly roundup of Generation Y and student resources you may have missed.
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Facebook rules: Everyone can vote on new privacy policy
Facebook's rules state if there are 7,000 comments on a new privacy policy, the company has to take it to a worldwide vote. Activists made sure that threshold was broken. Are you ready to vote?
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London police 'hack' suspects' phones: A major blow to human rights
London's police service will soon be allowed to 'hack' into phones of suspected criminals. This criminologist examines how dangerous this move is for ordinary citizens.
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Google Knowledge Graph: This is why they changed their privacy policy
Who needs a social graph when you have a knowledge graph?
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Flash mob stages conga line privacy protest against Facebook
Online privacy company Abine organizes simultaneous protests in New York and San Francisco to highlight concerns about Facebook's access to private data.
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San Francisco hates your startup: SceneTap
San Francisco denizens are angry that facial-detection cameras placed in bars by nightlife startup app SceneTap go live on Friday.
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Flashmob privacy protests target Facebook tomorrow: New York, San Francisco
Privacy activists target pre-IPO Facebook for flash mob protests tomorrow in New York and San Francisco.
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iSSH developer Dean Beeler: The right stuff for iOS apps
Want to program your own iOS App? Find out how one developer took a weekend project and made a success story out of it.
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Watch it live: Facebook privacy policy Q&A
Do you have questions about Facebook's proposed changes to its privacy (aka Data Use) policy? Tune in and watch Facebook Chief Privacy Officer for Policy Erin Egan answer them live.
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Facebook updates privacy policy, will answer questions Monday
Facebook has outlined significant changes to its privacy (aka Data Use) policy and is asking its users for feedback. The company has also scheduled a live Q&A video for this coming Monday.
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Google, Facebook, MySpace; privacy rule breakers or trend makers?
The major social networking sites have all been fined for improper use of private data; is that a trend that should be ringing alarm bells or a sideshow for the paranoid and uninitiated?
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70% don't trust Facebook with their personal information
Do you trust Facebook with your personal information? Have you changed your Facebook privacy settings? For any online service, make sure to take advantage of all the settings at your disposal.
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Microsoft quietly rolls out Silverlight 5.1
Microsoft made available for download Silverlight 5.1 on May 8. Here's what's included in this minor update.
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Google 'negotiating FTC fine' after bypassing Safari privacy settings
Google is understood to be in talks with the FTC over how much it will be fined by the regulator after it bypassed the privacy settings in Apple's Safari browser.
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