Author: JT Smith
The nature of trust online
Apple Powerbook ‘bomb’ shuts airport
Author: JT Smith
And the ‘culprit’? Step forward the Titanium Powerbook G4. Operators of an x-ray
machine installed at Burbank airport were unable to get a high-enough res look at
a machine trundling through security. They called in back up for some chemical
analysis. Swabs revealed “residues” which caused some concern The police and
the FBI were called in, flights were cancelled, and hundreds of customers were left
milling the booking hall.
After six hours, the police determined that the Powerbook was indeed a Powerbook
and not a bomb.”
Category:
- Linux
Tom’s Hardware steers chip market, some say
Author: JT Smith
influence. These are the alpha geeks to whom everyone turns to for
technical advice – 60 percent of them are IT professionals who are in the
business of buying and recommending hardware for their employers. So
when an AMD chip outperforms a pricier Pentium in one of Tom’s CPU
smackdowns, there’s a ripple effect on the market.”
Category:
- Unix
Tuesday 24 April 2001: Marconi forum on Internet privacy
Author: JT Smith
remain private without having to worry that their ideas, or even their
identities, are stolen and every detail of their lives will be laid bare
while others profit from personal data collection.”
Tuesday 24 April 2001: Marconi Forum on Internet Privacy From: secretary@lxny.org To: editors@newsforge.com Date: Mon, 23 Apr 2001 04:09:57 -0400 This meeting starts at 4:00 pm on the Columbia campus. This meeting is free and open to the public. This meeting is important. Official notice below. Jay SulzbergerCorresponding Secretary LXNY LXNY is New York's Free Computing Organization. http://www.lxny.org > Date: 4 Apr 2001 13:33:27 -0400 > Organization: Columbia University Department of Computer Science > Message-ID:> Reply-To: theory-group-request@cs.columbia.edu 2001 Marconi Forum on Internet Privacy Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science Privacy Under Assault: Can Encryption Safeguard the Internet? Tuesday, April 24, 2001 International Marconi Day 4-6 p.m. Reception to follow Davis Auditorium of the Schapiro Center for Engineering and Physcical Science Research Columbia University New York, N.Y. Web users want assurances that their communications or e-commerce will remain private without having to worry that their ideas, or even their identities, are stolen and every detail of their lives will be laid bare while others profit from personal data collection. Digital threats arise from all quarters, including corporations and marketing firms, potential employers and credit agencies, health and government establishments, as well as outright snoopers and opportunists. Can improved technologies protect privacy on the Internet or is privacy a casualty of the digital age? The Marconi Forum brings together leading figures from technology, government, journalism, business and law to examine how-- or whether-- our right to privacy can be secured from digital incursions. Participants are : Zvi Galil, Moderator Dean, Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science expert on encryption Whitfield Diffie Distinguished Engineer, Sun Microsystems co-inventor, public key cryptography 2000 Marconi Fellow Michael Rabin Professor of Computer Science Harvard University developed code based on "vanishing" key John Podesta White House Chief of Staff Clinton Administration Visiting Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center Steven Levy Author, Crypto, Spring 2001 Senior Editor, Technology, Newsweek Shari Steele Excutive Director Electronic Privacy Association advocate for civil liberties in online world Eli Noam Professor, Columbia Business School Director, Columbia Institute for for Tele-information authority on telecommunications strategy and policy Sponsored by the Marconi Foundation, The Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science Columbia University in collaboration with The Center for New Media, Columbia Graduate School of Journalism Columbia Institute for Tele-Information, Columbia Business School
Linux Security Week – April 23rd 2001
Author: JT Smith
published. Although some of the topics are trivial to seasoned security experts, the topics are still important and should be
addressed. Some of the best articles included, “Securing Your Apache Server,” “Iptables Basics NHF,” and “Firewall Design
White Paper.” Also this week, if you are an EnGarde user, you will probably want to take a look at our Tripwire and vsFTP
HOWTOs.”
Category:
- Linux
Scanning your BSD network
Author: JT Smith
TCP/IP connections. In the next few articles, I’d like to demonstrate putting some
of this knowledge together in order to increase the security of your FreeBSD
system.”
Category:
- Linux
Gates no longer world’s richest man
Author: JT Smith
world’s richest man, according to a survey released over the weekend by The
Sunday Times newspaper in London.
Amid the high-tech retreat of the past year, Gates’ fortune has slumped, shrinking
from 53.1 billion pounds to just 37.5 billion pounds ($76.6 billion to $54.1 billion).
American retail magnate Sam Walton, who runs the Wal-Mart Stores international
retail chain, jumped into the top spot in the 2001 survey with 45.3 billion pounds.”
Intel extends lead with Pentium 4
Author: JT Smith
bit, but the race to build faster processors keeps zooming along.
With the announcement today of the 1.7GHz Pentium 4
processors, Intel has extended its lead – at least in terms of raw
clock speed – over rival AMD (the Athlon chip currently tops
out at 1.33GHz).”
Category:
- Unix