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Jumat, 05 Juni 2015

US Government Agency Hacked: Four Million Records at Risk - TechZone360


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Did you know that June just so happens to be National Internet Safety Month? Maybe someone should have told the U.S. government, which just got hacked.
The distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack landscape is a shifting sea of motives and techniques-which is necessitating new approaches to detection and mitigation.
The vast majority of mobile marketers buy app installs ads on a cost per install (CPI) basis and focus their campaigns on one primary goal: getting the most installs at the lowest cost.
If we have learned nothing else in the past few days of revelations of major data breaches around the world, it should be that the time between detection and mediation seems to be appalling long.
Nintendo may have made an interesting move to the Android OS this last week (or not), and it should help them drop costs significantly. I think this initial news and denial means one of two things; they just weren't ready to announce this yet or they plan to go the Amazon route and fork Android to create a related platform. Either path should prove interesting.
Remember back in school when the teacher let you figure out a math problem in a group instead of alone? Sure, there were times when the one math genius in the group did all the work-but there were other times when there were genuinely strengths used from almost every member. Measure your key problems via input, says Hoffman. It's a lot easier to solve your problem with more information than less.
June is a wonderful month for a lot of people out there. The official start of summer, the start of strawberry season for North America, summer festivals, weddings, and a host of others-not to mention summer vacation for the kids-all show up in June. But June is also National Internet Safety Month, and the National Cyber Security Alliance (NCSA) is offering up some fresh words of wisdom to help ensure online safety all summer long, and beyond.
In case you missed it, on May 28, U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Tom Wheeler set forth a series of proposals in a Notice designed to restructure and modernize the FCC's Lifeline program. The objective is simple, the institution of an efficient and effective way to help low-income consumers afford access to essential communications services including broadband along with further combating waste and better targeting the program to those who need it most.
Intel this week laid out plans to buy Altera for $16.7 billion in cash. The deal comes just days after Avago Technologies announced its intention to buy Broadcom for $37 billion.
Charter Communications wants to buy both Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks in a $67 billion deal. It will create an entity second in size to Comcast among the cable operators. Will Charter have better luck than Comcast? I'm willing to give the deal 50-50 odds at this point, because there's no real reason not to stop the deal - but no real reason to be behind it, either.

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