Cybersecurity
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While overall ransomware attack numbers remained steady, higher education institutions drove a sharp rise in exposed records, fueled in part by third-party software vulnerabilities.
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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.
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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.
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The groups want documentation on how the U.S. government is obtaining records from libraries, bookstores and ISPs under the USA Patriot Act.
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Though minor, the attack on Monday did demonstrate the potential for larger harm.
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State and local law enforcement's lack of access to federal information is a serious problem, experts say.
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NASCIO conference brings opportunity to build nationwide communications system in partnership with the Office of Homeland Security.
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A Swedish company says the news service got information from a Web page that wasn't designed for public access.
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The spammer agreed not to send any unsolicited e-mail on Verizon's networks.
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While the United States struggles to merely modernize elections, England experiments with remote electronic voting.
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Federal agencies share personal information with other agencies and some companies from the private sector.
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Wireless technology and interoperability were big winners at the 2002 Winter Games.
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Government agencies will do all they can to protect the identity of companies that have been victimized by crackers.
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The judge's decision leaves the nine states that went against the Department of Justice settlement out in the cold.
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The company said it will build a lab to develop technologies to defend against viruses and other electronic attacks, but some say there are other ways to create better security.
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Though elections appear to be going well, states and counties are still watching to make sure voting goes well.
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Residents of one Chinese province must swipe access cards containing personal data on an identifying machine before they can get on a PC to access the Web.
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Up until two months ago, only e-mail was allowed at private homes in Iraq.
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Security initiative will give third parties electronic keys to PCs.
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