Cybersecurity
-
To guard against phishing-based ransomware attacks, the state is outfitting 161 of its jurisdictions and other public-sector organizations with hardware-based protection. And it's not alone.
-
Gov. Tim Walz has authorized $1.2 million in state emergency disaster assistance to address a cybersecurity incident that disrupted digital services in St. Paul for several weeks this summer.
-
County commissioners approved a three-year Microsoft 365 and cybersecurity agreement, plus a cyber suite add-on. Two members said the risk of exposing sensitive data outweighs concerns about monthly costs.
More Stories
-
The man has until Friday to remove personal information of employees of a retirement home from a Web site he created, or he goes back to jail.
-
Attendees of the fourth meeting held by the President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board discussed Web-related vulnerabilities within government and the private sector.
-
A high-level committee will begin work on getting the legislation creating the new Homeland Security Department through the House and the Senate.
-
The information the man posted on a Web site was "harassment," according to the judge who put the man in jail.
-
Attendees of the annual conference of the Internet Society warned that profit motives and government control could stifle the Internet.
-
The man's Web site contained home addresses and telephone numbers of retirement home staff.
-
Though e-business is waning, governments' adoption of electronic services is on the rise.
-
Agents are requesting records on library patrons' reading lists.
-
Several campuses have been targeted by individuals installing keystroke-recording software to attempt to steal personal information.
-
The proposed law would require ISPs to keep records of IP addresses of users.
-
Howard Schmidt, the former chief security officer at Microsoft, speaks about the national plan and other cyber security issues.
-
Educating employees about safe practices as well as market forces will determine how fast the public and private sectors work out security kinks.
-
Governments consider technologies and priorities to build secure systems.
-
As part of a security upgrade in many of America's leading businesses, a new communications link establishes a secure hotline between leading CEOs and key homeland security officials to deal with any future terrorist threats.
-
Palladium, Microsoft's new effort at security, draws scrutiny from European regulators over potential interoperability issues.
-
EU regulators are exploring issues related to online authentication services offered by Microsoft, AOL and the Liberty Alliance Project.
-
The high-speed technology could improve the way public-safety agencies respond to emergency situations.
-
Two security systems, being tested at Logan International Airport, are combined to help identify fraudulent travel documents.
Most Read