Cybersecurity
-
Since making the change in the spring of 2025, officials have consolidated licenses and are pushing Internet to all city sites. Both initiatives combined have saved several hundreds of thousands of dollars.
-
Navigating insights from the World Economic Forum’s meeting at Davos on AI-driven threats, the push for digital sovereignty and the weaponization of critical global infrastructure.
-
As part of a 10-county pilot, the local government fully implemented the technology Jan. 29. Its GPS, GIS and improved cellphone technology offer additional accuracy during emergencies.
More Stories
-
The company believes a new type of partnership between the public and private sectors is coming.
-
Private and public entities collaborate to publish benchmarks for Internet security.
-
-
The intelligence agency will now have to work with state and local law enforcement agencies; something that's not happened in the past.
-
From forming political action committees to creating special business units, companies are jockeying for position to secure potentially valuable contracts.
-
The case hinges on whether posting code to break encryption software is free speech.
-
The three alleged identity thieves have victimized more than 30,000 people, according to authorities.
-
President Bush's plan lays out March 1, 2003, as the date that the new department will take shape.
-
An additional 10,000 people could have been victimized by the identity thieves arrested this week.
-
The federal government will divulge information to the ACLU and several other groups by the middle of January.
-
Amnesty International is calling for the Chinese government to release 33 prisoners.
-
The Chinese government routinely blocks access to other Web sites that offer information on health, education, news, entertainment, religion and pornography.
-
The firms violated a rule stipulating how long they were supposed to keep e-mail correspondence.
-
The state's implementation of its SAN took top honors in the systems-implementation category.
-
A study from health researchers finds "modest" impact on Internet users seeking health information.
-
The libel ruling could stifle small Internet publishers, who may not be able to fight lawsuits in other countries.
-
Police allegedly arrested the man last month for his pro-democracy, online journal.
-
The former systems administrator released a virus-like program that affected approximately 1,000 PCs in the company's network.
Most Read