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Senate to Debate Again When and How Government Seizes the Cloud

By Scott M. Fulton, III / January 30, 2012 8:30 AM / View Comments

US Capitol - Senate side.jpgThe rapid migration by U.S. government agencies to cloud-based architectures is producing radical, and potentially beneficial, changes to these agencies' management structures. Costs are coming down, and as some agencies are just now realizing, security and resiliency could be going up. But the very concept of cloud infrastructure is something that legislators have yet to become familiar with.

So another long-debated piece of cybersecurity legislation will enter the next round of what has become an annual event: As The Hill reports this morning, Sen. Joe Liebermann's (I - Conn.) cybersecurity bill is likely to make another appearance this week in the Homeland Security Committee which he chairs.

Facebook Partners with Security Startup, Protects Users From Scammer's Links

By Dan Rowinski / May 12, 2011 11:10 AM / View Comments

WOT_Logo_150x150.jpgFacebook and Internet security startup Web of Trust have announced a partnership today that will protect users from clicking potentially malicious links from the social media platform. Web of Trust (WOT) is a company that determines whether or not a webpage is trustworthy based on feedback from a community of users.

The partnership will boost Facebook's system, which already scanned links for spam or malware, by giving it access to WOT's database of websites that its 20 million users have flagged as harmful. If a user clicks on a link that is deemed untrustworthy a warning will pop up notifying the user to avoid the link, learn more about or continue to the page.

More Cyberbullying on Facebook, Social Sites than Rest of Web

By Sarah Perez / May 10, 2010 7:35 AM / View Comments

Thirty-two percent of online teens have experienced some form of harassment via the Internet, a problem also known as "cyberbullying." According to recent data, 15% of online teens have had private material forwarded without permission, 13% have received threatening messages and 6% have had embarrassing photos posted without permission.

In light of the recent discussions surrounding Facebook and privacy issues, it's important to note that Facebook's new push towards becoming a more open, public network won't just have an effect on an adult population concerned with worries of "friending" bosses and colleagues or adjusting the privacy settings on their children's photos - it will affect the children themselves, as well as teens and young adults, all of which combined make up over a quarter of the social network's user base.

What's a Little Cyberbullying Among Friends? Facebook Launches New Safety Center

By Sarah Perez / April 13, 2010 7:30 AM / View Comments

"Safety is Facebook's top priority," writes Facebook's Chief Security Officer Joe Sullivan on a company blog post introducing the social network's new Safety Center, a revamped help portal featuring educational information for users, with sections dedicated to parents, teens, teachers and law enforcement professionals. It's a somewhat ironic statement from a company that recently prompted its 400-plus million users to accept "recommended" changes that opened up their data - including status updates, photos, videos, links and friend lists - to a public audience, revealing details that many users assumed were private.

Around the same time as the "privacy debacle," as we like to call it, unfolded, Facebook also announced a "Safety Advisory Board," a group whose purpose is to review safety-related procedures and documentation as well as make suggestions regarding best practices and other procedures. How about this safe practice, Facebook: don't publicize people's private information?

More Sources Claim Chinese Government Involvement in Cyberattacks on Google, Others

By Sarah Perez / January 13, 2010 2:10 PM / View Comments

More sources are now claiming the Chinese government is behind the recent cyberattacks against Google and 33 other Silicon Valley companies, reports security firm Verisign iDefense. The attacks, revealed yesterday via a posting on Google's official blog, were hacking attempts on the technology infrastructure of Google and other major corporations in sectors that included finance, technology, media and chemical, said Dave Girouard, president of Google Enterprise.

Although Google's politely-worded blog post doesn't come out and directly blame the Chinese government for these attacks, many have suspected that is the case, including, apparently, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Now even more sources are coming out to confirm the Chinese government's involvement. According to Verisign, their sources within the defense-contracting and intelligence-consulting communities also believe "agents of the Chinese state or proxies thereof" are to blame for these recent attacks.

No Cyber Czar for You, America: Obama Fails to Appoint InfoSec Head

By Jolie O'Dell / December 10, 2009 4:00 PM / View Comments

In a recent interview, Homeland Security deputy undersecretary Philip Reitinger commented on President Obama's as-yet unfulfilled promise to appoint a senior White House cybersecurity advisor.

Although the nation has an acting cybersecurity coordinator in former FBI cyber staffer Chris Painter, no permanent appointee has been named in the six months since the President announced his commitment to create and fill this position. Can the White House appropriately and competently address our national needs without a permanent cybersecurity head? In light of our assessment of America's vulnerability to cyber attacks just six months ago, Reitinger's reaction is surprising.

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