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
-
Wi-Fi demonstrates that the computer industry can agree on standards.
-
The graduate student is accused of helping create Web sites to raise money for terrorism against Americans.
-
New legislation seeks to overturn exemptions to the Freedom and Information Act contained in the bill that created the Homeland Security Department.
-
The database is being called an "electronic neighborhood watch," and allows residents to search parolees by ZIP code, name or prison ID number.
-
The U.N. said it is using the biometric technology to fight refugee fraud.
-
The Recording Industry Association of America is threatening corporations with "significant legal damages" if corporate networks are used to illegally trade music.
-
Antonin Scalia said he would not accept a free speech award if broadcast media were present at the event.
-
But analysts say WiFi roaming is still a distant goal.
-
But the viruses were stronger, and that cost enterprises more money in recovery efforts.
-
An Arizona couple allegedly bilked more than 500 people through fraudulent online auctions.
-
The Attorney General told Congress the warrants help agents get intelligence on terrorism in the United States.
-
Civil-rights advocates say there will be more court cases.
-
Before the change, information had to be "accurate, relevant, timely and complete" before it could be entered into the FBI's National Crime Information Center system.
-
The servers that host the site are in France and the United States, and the attacks are believed to be coming from America.
-
Consumers can sign up via the Web or a toll-free telephone call.
-
-
-
Most Read